![]() ![]() Recall that Merge & Center physically merges cells and centers the remaining text. Here we have the same table we looked at in an earlier lesson on aligning text across cells using Merge. ![]() ![]() Knowledge is power - if you don't know what's available you can miss an opportunity or spend hours trying to jury-rig a solution by cobbling together other functions. Unlike merging, Center Across Selection leaves all cells in place but still centers text across columns. You can't add these to any favourites list but you can make your own "Check these out" list It helps you to combine cells in one row and get the content centered. Similarly, open the Function Wizard window and check out the functions available (made easier bc you can do so by category). If so, add it to your QAT and try it out.ΔΆ. open the Customize Quick Access Toolbar window and just scroll through the list of commands available (Note: some are only available thru customisation as they are not on the inbuilt menu!) and see what each tool does and whether it may be useful to you. I'm from the same era: Learned 123 in 1984/85 from a 5.25" floppy tutorial, & Multiplan, then progressed thru Symphony, Supercalc, back to 123, and then Excel 4 & 5 in 1995 - and have never looked back! That's the beauty and ugliness of Excel - there are more tools & features than you can ever learn or know about! ![]()
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