A range can only be cells that are adjacent and in a rectangular shape. It is possible to select non-adjacent cells but this would not be regarded as a range. Each would be a separate range. So usually non-adjacent ranges will have gaps between them, although it is possible to have cells from to separate ranges right beside each other. You will know them by their boundaries around them.
A range.
In Excel 2007, a cell range can be contiguous, meaning it consists of adjacent or neighboring cells (e.g., A1:B5). A cell range can also be non-contiguous, where it consists of multiple disjoint cell areas separated by commas (e.g., A1:A5, C1:C5).
In order to group nonadjacent worksheets, you click first tab, then hold Ctrl and click last tab. Excel was developed by Microsoft.
After selecting the first row or column, press and hold the ctrl key and click on the header of the next row or column you want to select.
I'm not very interested in nonadjacent properties.
It can simply be a range. It could also be an array. It will depend on the formula itself.
Depending on what you mean, it could be a range, which is a group of cells in Excel, that can be referenced in a formula as a block, but they are not a single cell then. You could be referring to cells that have been merged, in which case Excel treats them as a single cell.
No. You need to use the Ctrl key to select non adjacent ranges.
range
Correct the range by dragging the appropriate cells in the worksheet. You could also type in the correct range.
Any business can use Excel for a whole range of things.
range