Chapter 4Working with Cells and Ranges

IN THIS CHAPTER

  1. Understanding Excel cells and ranges
  2. Selecting cells and ranges
  3. Copying or moving ranges
  4. Using names to work with ranges
  5. Adding comments to cells

Most of the work you do in Excel involves cells and ranges. Understanding how best to manipulate cells and ranges will save you time and effort. This chapter discusses a variety of techniques that are essential for Excel users.

Understanding Cells and Ranges

A cell is a single element in a worksheet that can hold a value, some text, or a formula. A cell is identified by its address, which consists of its column letter and row number. For example, cell D9 is the cell in the fourth column and the ninth row.

A group of cells is called a range. You designate a range address by specifying its upper-left cell address and its lower-right cell address, separated by a colon.

Here are some examples of range addresses:

C24 A range that consists of a single cell.
A1:B1 Two cells that occupy one row and two columns.
A1:A100 100 cells in column A.
A1:D4 16 cells (four rows by four columns).
C1:C1048576 An entire column of cells; this range also can be expressed as C:C.
A6:XFD6 An entire row of cells; this range also can be expressed as 6:6.
A1:XFD1048576 All cells in a worksheet. This range also can be expressed as either A:XFD or 1:1048576.

Selecting ranges

To perform an operation on a range of cells in a worksheet, you must first select the range. For example, if you ...

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