A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
A3 is 4 times bigger than A1, so only a quarter of an A3 sheet can fit into an A1 sheet.
8 pieces
If you divide A0 size in half (cut or fold it) you get A1. If you divide A1 in half you get A2, etc, etc. Therefore 210 A10 sheets fit into A0, = 1024 sheets. A10 is very small (26 × 37 mm) and of little use.
A1 paper size measures 594 mm x 841 mm, while A4 paper size measures 210 mm x 297 mm. Since A1 is four times the size of A2, which in turn is four times the size of A3, A4 can fit into A1 a total of 8 times when arranged properly. Thus, you can fit 8 A4 sheets into one A1 sheet.
8 :)
You can obtain 16. If you think about it, 2 A5s go into 1 A4, 4 A5s go into 1 A3, 8 A5s go into 1 A2, and 16 A5s go into 1 A1.
A2 is larger than A3. An A1 sheet can be exactly divided into 2 A2 sheets, and A2 sheet can be exactly divided into to A3 sheets, etc.
8 pieces
If you divide A0 size in half (cut or fold it) you get A1. If you divide A1 in half you get A2, etc, etc. Therefore 210 A10 sheets fit into A0, = 1024 sheets. A10 is very small (26 × 37 mm) and of little use.
A1 paper size measures 594 mm x 841 mm, while A4 paper size measures 210 mm x 297 mm. Since A1 is four times the size of A2, which in turn is four times the size of A3, A4 can fit into A1 a total of 8 times when arranged properly. Thus, you can fit 8 A4 sheets into one A1 sheet.
Insert the sheet name and an exclamation point before the cells you would like to add:=Sheet1!A1+Sheet2!A1
A4*2 = A3 A3*2 = A2 = 2*2*A4 A2*2 = A1 = 2*2*2*A4 = 8*A4 Answer: 8 pieces of A4 zized papers will fit on 1 sheet of A1.
You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.You could just copy everything on one sheet to another. If you want to keep the sheets always having the same thing, then you need formulas in the other sheet, making the cell equal to the other sheet's corresponding cell. So if you wanted what was in A1 on Sheet2 to be the same as A1 on Sheet1, then in A1 on Sheet2 you would have:=Sheet1!A1You then have to copy that formula to all cells in the worksheet on order to make it the same as the first sheet.
8 :)
You can obtain 16. If you think about it, 2 A5s go into 1 A4, 4 A5s go into 1 A3, 8 A5s go into 1 A2, and 16 A5s go into 1 A1.
11,846
A1 The 'A' series of paper is such that A0 is 1m2 in area and each next number up is half the previous area: A1 is 0.5m2, A2 is 0.25m2 and so on. The ratio of the sides of the paper series are such that 1 Sheet of A0 can be cut in half parallel to its shorter side to create 2 sheets of A1; each sheet of A1 can be cut in half parallel to its shorter side to create 2 sheets of A2; and so on. The sides are in the ratio of 1 : sqrt(2). A0 is approx 841mm x 1189mm, A1 is approx 595mm x 841mm, A2 is approx 420mm x 595mm, A3 is approx 297mm x 420mm, A4 is approx 210mm x 297mm, and so on.
According to Wikipedia, the total UK area is about 243610km2. Since one square km has 1000x1000 = 1000000m2, this the area is about 243 610 000 000 m2. Each sheet of A0 paper has an area of exactly one square meter. The area of A1 is exactly half that of A0, A2 half of A1, and so forth. 16 sheets of A4 paper thus cover one sheet of A0 paper, covering an area of 1m2. Thus, you'd need 16 * 243 610 000 000 to cover the area of the UK with sheets of A4 paper.