A crosshair with 4 arrows.
On the range border. Place the mouse pointer on the highlighted border of the range, so the pointer becomes a 4-pointed cross, then drag to the desired location.
Four-Headed Arrow.
It updates to display the most recently selected border style.
It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.It is a cell border to indicate that the cell is the active cell when it is the only cell selected. When multiple cells are selected, there is still only one active cell, but the border is around that area of cells. If multiple ranges are selected, then no border appears around the active cell or the any of the selected areas.
To resize a column, place the pointer on the right edge of the column heading until the pointer changes to a doubleheaded arrow. Click and drag to the right until the column expands to the width you want.
moving border
It will be on the bottom right corner of the border of the active cell if one cell is selected. If more than one cell is selected, then it will be at the bottom right corner of the selected area.
The active cell in a spreadsheet contains the cell pointer and is marked with a heavy black border to indicate where data will be entered or modified.
as a solid line
The selected range to be copied is typically surrounded by a dotted line border (also known as a "marching ants" border) in applications like Microsoft Excel or Google Sheets. This border helps visually indicate the area that will be copied when performing the copy action.
No, a dotted border usually indicates that an object is in focus or highlighted but may not necessarily mean the entire object is selected. Selection is typically indicated by a solid border or a different highlighting effect.
A moving border surrounds a selected cell or range of cells that has been copied to the Clipboard. This border usually appears as a dashed or dotted line and indicates that the data is ready to be pasted elsewhere.