There can be various answers to that. If you are talking about gridlines, then at its simplest, it could be a single cell. You could also have a set of data forming a table on a worksheet, as opposed to the blank areas, though they would also have vertical and horizontal gridlines. Sections bounded by horizontal gridlines are rows. Sections bounded by vertical gridlines are columns.
It is called a pane (as in window pane).
horizontal lines and vertical lines
There are two of them. The vertical scrollbar is up the right side of the worksheet. The horizontal scrollbar is across the bottom of the worksheet.
OK. You answered your own question.
Columns are always vertical and rows are always horizontal. Together they form a table. These appear in different applications, such Word, Access and Excel. In Excel they are known as a worksheet.
You can use the horizontal (located at the bottom of the worksheet) and vertical (located to the right of the worksheet) scroll bars. You also can use the view option to see more or less of the worksheet area.
net force
Yes of cours we can split a worksheet Click the split bar located at the right edge of the horizontal scroll bar. Drag to the left until you reach the column at which you want the worksheet window divided. Release the mouse button. Excel splits the window at that column and adds a second horizontal scroll bar to the other part of the worksheet.
Vertical is up and horizontal is across
Horizontal scroll bars allow you to move the worksheet viewing window left and right. Vertical scroll bars allow you to move the worksheet viewing window up and down. By scrolling around the screen, you will be able to view all the portions of the worksheet. You also can change the view percent to see more or less in the viewing window, but if you make the text too small, you will not be able to read it.
Vertical and horizontal
vertical and horizontal
No. Up-down is vertical. Horizontal is perpendicular to vertical.