shift key
The simplest way is to click on the first cell and drag across the other cells you want whicle holding the mouse button. You can also do it by pressing and holding the Shift key and then use the arrow keys to select the cells around it. You can also press the F8 key and then use the arrow keys to select the cells around it.
A cell is the smallest unit in Excel, you cannot break it into multiple cells. However, if you have merged multiple cells into one large cell, you can break that merged cell into multiple cells by unmerging the single large merged cell.
To format a selected range of cells in Excel, click on "Format" in the cell section of the top menu bar. The keyboard shortcut Ctrl - 1 will also open the Format Cells dialog box. Next, click on "Format cells" in the drop-down menu. This will bring up a box. Click on the Number tab, then choose "Currency". Choose from a large range of symbols. The $ is the symbol for US currency.
Offspring which arise as a contiguous outgrowth of the parent is called budding. The process of a parent cell dividing into a large number of genetically identical cells all at once is known as multiple fission.
The Sahara Desert is nearly as big as the contiguous 48 states.
By clicking on one corner of the range and then clicking on the other corner while holding down the shift key.
The Sahara is nearly as big as the contiguous 48 United States.
If it is a number that is in the cell that is not wide enough, Excel will fill the cell with # symbols. If it is text in the cell, either the text will only show what can fit in it if the next cell has something in it, or it will spill out across the neighbouring cells if they are empty, though the text will not actually be in those neighbouring cells.
The Sahara Desert!
No, an elephant is not large because it has large cells.
Spreadsheets can contain millions of cells in each spreadsheet, and a spreadsheet file can include multiple spreadsheets. For example, Lotus 1-2-3 and Microsoft Excel spreadsheets have 256 columns and 65,536 rows, or 16,777,216 cells.
The Sahara Desert!