Yes.
To drag and drop is a way of moving something with the mouse. You are effectively dragging it from its current position and moving it and then dropping it into its new position. It is done visually, so you can see it happening, unlike when you do the same thing using Cut and Paste commands.
don't drag it copy and paste it
Paste is considered to have more dragging force. Although water is considered to be denser then paste, paste creates more friction. The higher the level of friction, the greater the drag.
To drag and drop is a way of moving something with the mouse. You are effectively dragging it from its current position and moving it and then dropping it into its new position. It is done visually, so you can see it happening, unlike when you do the same thing using Cut and Paste commands.
Either drag the formula cell down the column, or copy (right-click) the cell then paste (right-click) in other cells.
Paste options
No. Drag and drop is when you drag a file then drop it into the destination folder. You have moved a file from one place to another. Copy and paste is when you copy a file then paste it into a different location. The original file still remains where it was, but there is how a copy of it elsewhere as well.
no
cut/copy and paste or drag and drop.
You have to download it then drag & drop, cut & paste, or copy & paste it to your SD card.
You can use the Cut and Paste option. There are various ways of doing this, like using Ctrl - X to cut, or picking it off the Edit Menu or off the shortcut menu by right clicking on the mouse or by doing Alt - E - T. Paste can be done in several corresponding ways, with the key controls being Ctrl - V or Alt - E - P. You can also move a cell by putting the cursor on the edge of a cell or a group of selected cells and then dragging them. You can also do this when also hold Shift, in which case they will be inserted into a new location rather than overwriting cells that they are moved to.
Paste options button