The intersection of a column and row in excel called "cell"
A cell is the box that is formed in a table where a row and a column intersect. ... In PowerPoint you can adjust the height and width of the cells.
Is it a table????
a cell
cell
Each intersection of a row and column is a cell. So it will depend on which version of Excel you have There are 16,777,216 cells in Excel 2003 and earlier. There are 17,179,869,184 cells in Excel 2007 and after.
The intersection of row and column is called a cell.
The intersection is called a cell.
The intersection is called a cell.
Intersection of column F and row 6.
It is a single block in the grid on the Excel screen, formed by the intersection of a column and row.
The area formed by the intersection of rows and column is called "cell".
The area formed by the intersection of rows and column is called "cell".
In a Excel table (or spreadsheet), the intersection of a column and row is called a "cell." Where a column and row intersect you get a cell. The cell is reference by the column letter and the row number. So, for example, where column C meets row 15, is cell C15. You classify it by its column letter followed by the row number. Such as D3, B2, C5, etc.
That intersection is called a "CELL".
It is formed where a column and row intersect on a worksheet. This is what gives the cell its address, the column and row references. Where column C and row 7 intersect forms cell C7 for example.