horizontal lines and vertical lines
The worksheet.
Gridlines
The grid is a worksheet and is created by gridlines.
When you look at a worksheet in Excel you can see all the cells, because of the lines around them. Those are gridlines. You can also add borders, to make heavier lines around cells. Gridlines can be turned off completely, by going to the Options menu and the View section and removing the tick beside Gridlines.
To switch off the gridlines in most spreadsheet applications like Microsoft Excel or Google Sheets, you can usually go to the "View" menu. In Excel, uncheck the "Gridlines" option in the "Show" group. In Google Sheets, you can uncheck "Gridlines" from the "View" menu. This will hide the gridlines from your worksheet, allowing for a cleaner appearance.
There can be various answers to that. If you are talking about gridlines, then at its simplest, it could be a single cell. You could also have a set of data forming a table on a worksheet, as opposed to the blank areas, though they would also have vertical and horizontal gridlines. Sections bounded by horizontal gridlines are rows. Sections bounded by vertical gridlines are columns.
You apply borders to some or all cells. Don't confuse borders with gridlines. Gridlines show the cells. A new worksheet has no borders, just gridlines. You can then put borders around whichever cells you want or just around parts of a cell, so not all 4 sides. Gridlines can be turned off to give more effect to borders.
ALT
On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)On a worksheet, cells are shown to be separated by gridlines. References to individual cells in a formula are separated by a comma. The following formula gets the average of a number of separate cells on the worksheet:=AVERAGE(A2,A5,A7,B12, B16,C20)
Yes
Rows and Columns and the "boxes" are called cells
yes, it is.