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It is true that periodic table is divided into rows and columns. The rows are called periods and columns are called groups.
periods are the rows and families are the columns
The columns are groups or families, and the rows are periods.
Families are the columns. Periods are the rows.
The periodic table is set up as a series of rows and columns. The rows are referred to as the series or the period.
by default is left alignment, you can change it if you want
alignment
It is true that periodic table is divided into rows and columns. The rows are called periods and columns are called groups.
periods are the rows and families are the columns
All views contain rows and columns. The default view is called the Normal view.
You can add columns or rows to any table. Adding a row does not add extra columns, so yes you can do it.
When you are defining the amounts of rows and columns for a table, Word allows to have one row and one column, in other words a single cell. So that is the absolute minimum. You may not regard that as being a table, so you can have two rows and one column or one row and two columns. You can have anything above that. Word usually suggests five columns and two rows as a default, but that can be changed.
Yes. Tables in general are made up of rows and columns. If it is a database table it can be said to be made up of records which are rows and fields which are columns.
table
table
No. In a database table the records are in rows and the fields are in columns.
There are NO vertical ROWS, because rows run horizontally, and COLUMNS run vertically. There are 18 vertical columns in the periodic table.