Examples of using Select the cell in English and their translations into Hebrew
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Colloquial
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Ecclesiastic
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Computer
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Programming
Then select the cells.
To apply conditional formatting to one or more cells, select the cells that you want to format.
Select the cell that contains the function.
If the text is in a table, select the cells you want.
Select the cells that contain the dates.
To sum a row of numbers, select the cell immediately to the right.
Select the cells where you will be entering the numbers.
To sum a column of numbers, select the cell immediately below the last number in the column.
Select the cell that has a comment you want deleted.
If you see a date instead of the result that you expected, select the cell, and then on the Home tab, select General.
Select the cells where you want to see your results.
If you see a date instead of the result that you expected, select the cell, and then on the Home tab, under Number, click General on the pop-up menu.
Select the cell that contains the result from step 2.
NOTE: If you see a date instead of the result that you expected, select the cell, and then on the Home tab, under Number, click General on the pop-up menu.
Select the cell where you want the results to appear.
Tip: Instead of typing the constants into your formula, you can select the cells(like B12:B15) that contain the values you want to use and enter the operators in between selecting cells. .
Select the cell that contains the comment you wish to delete.
To create an Excel table, select the cells containing data, and click Home> Table> Format as Table.
Select the cell or range of cells that contains the formula.
To Freeze both rows and columns, select the Cell located to the right of the Column that you want to Freeze and below the Row that you want to Freeze.
Select the cell or range of cells for which you want to add a fill color.
To Freeze both rows and columns, select the Cell located to the right of the Column that you want to Freeze and below the Row that you want to Freeze.
Select the cell or column that contains the text you want to split.
Select the cell, range of cells, or nonadjacent selections that you want to name.
Select the cell or cells you want to use as a basis for filling additional cells. .
First select the cell that has the formula you want to fill, then select the cells underneath it, and then press Ctrl+D.
First select the cell that has the formula you want to fill, then select the cells to the right of it, and then press Ctrl+R.
First, select the cell or cells where you want this to happen and use Ctrl+1 to bring upthe Format> Cells dialog, then Alignment> Text control> check the Wrap Text option.