Text is usually aligned to the left.
It is the default setting for text. It aligns the text to the right side of a cell. If you use left align, the text will be aligned to the left side of the cell. If you use center align, the text will be aligned in the center of the cell.
Format the cell to align right.
Click on the cell you want to change, then click on the text left align button, located on the Home menu ribbon in the text section.
It means that the right side of the line is the base point and the left side will be 'ragged.' It is typically done with the left side aligned. You can also align both sides which is the way most books and newspapers are printed.
When you rotate text in a cell in a spreadsheet, it doesn't physically move the text within the cell. Instead, it tilts the text to a different angle for better presentation. The actual position of the text content within the cell remains the same.
The single quote will: '5 <><><><><> The single quote (') flags an entry as text. as opposed to text vs numeric being determined in context. It is also possible to format / align a cell as right or left regardless of it text / numeric detection.
Text Here Text Here Text Here
Changing the alignment of an element on a web page can be achieved in multiple ways, but in HTML, all you need is to use the 'align' attribute. For example,: <p align="right">This is a message</p> will align this paragraph to the right side of the page. Other attributes of this value include left, middle, top, and bottom.
align function
valign="bottom"ExampleBottom aligned text.Top aligned text.
A right tab generally allows you to tab to a specific tab set and align the right side of the text. A regular tab will align the left side of text. In MS Windows, you can set tab stops for left, right, center, and decimal.
Left - aligns everything to the left Right - aligns everything to the right Centre - aligns everything to the middle Justify - stretches the text so it lines up at each margin