You cannot do that "in C" but can in TurboC:functions wherex and wherey are you friends. Consult the help.The cursor position, also known as the mouse position, is a function of the operating system, more specifically, not a function of the current window. Other than by hooking the mouse, a complex topic, there is no way to determine the current cursor position.For TurboC: WhereX WhereY from conio.h
In Turbo C, you can set the cursor position using the gotoxy() function. This function takes two parameters: the x (column) and y (row) coordinates, allowing you to position the cursor anywhere on the screen similar to WordPad. For example, gotoxy(10, 5); will move the cursor to the 10th column of the 5th row. To use this function, ensure you include the conio.h header file in your program.
The box on your screen that indicates the location of your cursor is typically referred to as the "status bar" or "status line." It is usually located at the bottom of the screen in many applications and displays information such as the cursor position, file status, and other relevant data. In text editors, it may show the line and column number of the cursor's position.
It will bring the cursor back to the start of something. In Excel, it brings the cursor back to the first cell of the row in the current window or pane, so usually back to column A.
at the current cursor position
Tab
Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.Put the cursor at the top border of the column until you see a black solid arrow pointing down and then click.
Bring cursor up to the letter on top of the column, then to the line separating that column from the next. The cursor will turn into a black cross, then just double click.
The key that removes text directly over the cursor is the "Delete" key. When pressed, it deletes the character to the right of the cursor's current position. In some applications, the "Backspace" key can be used to remove text directly to the left of the cursor.
What you do is widen the column, as an individual cell cannot be widened by itself. There are a few ways of widening a column. The simplest is to the the cursor between the column headings at the top of the worksheet with the column you want to widen being on the left. So if you wanted to widen Column A, go to where A and B are at the top of their columns and put the cursor in between the headings. If you do it correctly the cursor will change to having two arrows, one pointing left and one right, coming off a line in between them. Then press and hold the mouse button and drag to the right and column A will widen. Another way is having put the cursor in that position, to do a double click on the mouse. If there is any text in a cell in that column that is wider than the cell, the column will adjust to that width. the third way is to go to the Format Menu and pick Column and then Width.
Place the cursor in the row or column to be selected. Press the shift key and the spacebar to select a row. Press the Ctrl key and the spacebar to select a column. Using the mouse you can click on the row number or column letter to select the row or column.
You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.You can use the mouse to put the cursor between the two column headings and drag to change the width of the column to the left. You can also place the cursor there and double click and it will widen or narrow itself to the longest content in a cell, known as Autofit. You can go the format menu and type in a value for the column width.