You use the * key, which can be found on the numeric keypad.
If you want to multiply the contents of cells A1 and B3, use the formula =A1*B3.
The asterisk ("*") is used to multiply on spreadsheets.
The symbol is *
*
No. It is a mathematical operator.
In Java, the multiplication operator is represented by the asterisk, "*". This was not invented by Java; most programming languages, as well as programs such as Excel, use the same symbol.
In Java, the multiplication operator is represented by the asterisk, "*". This was not invented by Java; most programming languages, as well as programs such as Excel, use the same symbol.
In Excel, you use the asterisk, "*". As to the name, I would just call it the "multiplication sign".
An operator refers to the symbols used in mathematical operations. The main mathematical operations are addition, subtraction, multiplication, division and to the power of, like 10 to the power of two or 10². So the operators for those are + - * / and ^.
The less than operator is the < symbol.
The plus sign does adding and the minus sign does subtraction in Excel: =A10+B2 =A2-50 The * is used for multiplication. The / is used for division: =A2*A3 =A6/40
No it isn't.
It is used as the symbol for multiplication.
Yes, it is used for subtraction.
No. Percent is not an operator, it is a symbol or cell format style.
The asterisk is used for multiplication in Excel, as it is in any application that deals with calculations. To multiply the value in cell A3 by 10, you would have the following formula: =A3 * 10