There are alignments for both vertical and horizontal. Including them all you would have General, Left, Center, Center across selection, Right, Bottom, Top, Justify, Fill and Distributed.
horizontal...vertical
Spreadsheet alignment refers to how data is positioned within a cell. It can be left-aligned, center-aligned, or right-aligned. Adjusting alignment can improve the readability and presentation of data in a spreadsheet.
alignment
Horizontal alignment is the positioning of content in the cell across, like to the left, right or centre. Vertical alignment is the position of the content from the top of the cell to the bottom of a cell. If a cell is increased in height over its usual setting, then the vertical alignment can be used to position content at the top, middle or bottom of a cell. Both vertical and horizontal alignment can be done on the Alignment tab in the Format Cells dialog box. Pressing Ctrl-1 will open it.
You can have vertical and horizontal alignment. In vertical alignment you have top, center and bottom. In horizontal alignment, you have left, right and center. three types of alignments
In most spreadsheet software, the alignment of text within a cell can be adjusted using horizontal and vertical alignment tools. However, the actual contents of the cell itself cannot be physically re-aligned within the cell boundaries. If you need to adjust how text appears within a cell, you can use alignment options like left, center, or right alignment.
Moving cell contents to the left, right, or center of a cell.
Normally numbers align to the right. However, if a cell has had another alignment specifically set for it, then the number will follow that alignment.
Alignment.
Alignment can be done through the Alignment group on the Home tab on the ribbon.
Four
Some different types of alignment include left alignment (text aligned to the left margin), right alignment (text aligned to the right margin), center alignment (text centered between margins), and justified alignment (text aligned to both left and right margins). Each type serves a different visual purpose in design and formatting.