No. Clearing the cells in a table is typically just erasing the data in them. Deleting them would be getting rid of that column or row (or cell) completely along with the data inside.
clearing cells, removes the contents of the selected cells (the cells are undisturbed and calculations using them are still valid)deleting cells, removes both the contents and the cells themselves from the table (as the cells no longer exist any calculations using them are invalid and result in errors)
No. The clearing process is not an acceptable method of sanitizing unclassified hard disks.
You can render the workbook useless.
Same as deleting its content.
You're mixing up terminologies here. A cell can be cleared or deleted. When we delete a cell, the cell is physically removed from the table. The cells in the same row or column then slide into its place depending on which option we choose (shift up or slide left). When we clear a cell we remove the cell's content, but the cell itself is not removed. The cell content includes any formatting we've applied to the cell. That is, the cell will revert to the current default format.
Clearing a row removes the content and format of all cells in the row, but it does not remove the row. It leaves a completely blank row in the worksheet.
This process is called cell-mediated immunity. T cells, specifically cytotoxic T cells, recognize and destroy cells that are infected with a pathogen or abnormal cells, such as cancer cells. This immune response is crucial for clearing infections and providing immunity against future exposures to the same antigen.
It is called Edit mode.
yes it is
Your PSP is probably running slow due to low memory. Try clearing up some space by deleting unused files.
deleting files that have been downloaded involuntarily (eg images that have been on sites you have viewed, or scripts that have been running) the cache is useless, clearing it frees up memory
No. The same clearing process is used as a regular cheque