Yes, a comma is considered a text feature. It is a punctuation mark that separates words, phrases, or clauses in a sentence to aid in clarity and understanding.
Use comma in a writing. Procedurel Text, Recounts Or others.
Not necessarily. Commas are a feature of sentence structure. There is no word or phrase in English that requires a comma.
Use the Text to Columns option.Select the column where you have the data you want to split.Go to Data, Text to Columns.Select Delimited.Ensure that the comma checkbox is activated.Select a destination cell (default is current cell).Click Finish.
Not necessarily. Commas are a feature of sentence structure.
The term is self describing; it is a feature that formats text.
CSVDE
The comma is used to separate similar words. 2011 is a number and January is 'text'. Therefore no comma is needed. But you would want to use a comma to separate two numbers. Hence January 11, 2011.
No. Furthermore, there is no word or phrase in English that requires a comma. Commas are a feature of sentence structure.
Not necessarily. Commas are a feature of sentence structure. There is no word or phrase in English that requires one.
Text feature are words that are important and graphic feature are picture , maps , graphs , etc........
yes
What is a text feature that could add visual interest and clarity to a procedural document?