Hold down the Ctrl key as you click on the cells or group of cells you want to select.
Select the cell or cells you want. Go to the Insert menu, then pick Name, and then pick Define. You can then give the cell or cells the name you want.
Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.Select the cell or cells you want to apply a name to. Then for versions of Excel up to 2003, go to the Insert Menu and pick name. You can then add a name for your selection. For versions of Excel from 2007 onward, you can do it through the Name Manager which is on the Formulas ribbon.
If you want to use Excel to print an empty grid, then what you need to do is put borders around cells. Select the cells you want and go to the Format menu and pick Cells and then Border and then you can specify what borders you need. If there is nothing in those cells then you will get your empty grid.
Select the cells and then either click the merge and center icon on the standard toolbar or go to the Format menu and pick Cells and in Alignment, pick Merge Cells and set the alignment to be centred.
Select the cells you want and then use the Merge and Center icon on the formatting toolbar, or go to the Format menu, pick Cells, Alignment and Merge Cells.
Go into Format Cells and go to Border and you can pick up the style of the border, including double lines.
You can click on the alignment icons on the formatting toolbar. Another way is to to go to the Format menu and pick Cells and then Alignment and from there you can pick whichever format of alignment you want.
Pick a cell in which to enter your formula Type: =average( then highlight the cells you wish to average. Press enter.
Highlight the cells you are interested in merging .. make sure you are on the "home" tab (found at the top of the excel program), and choose the down arrow beside merge & center in the "alignment box". there you will find the option to merge & center, merge across, merge cells, and unmerge cells ..
Select the block of cells you want to work on, including headings. Then go to the Data menu and pick Filter and then Advanced Filter.
Select the cell where the result is. Go to the Format Menu, pick Cells and under the Number tab, pick Number. There is an option there to change the amount of decimal places. You can set that to 5 and then click OK.
Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.Once Excel is open, go to the File Menu or the Office button and pick and open the file you want. Repeat for any files you want to open. There is no need to re-open Excel itself.