B
Boatman
When I first started using spreadsheets years ago, LOTUS 1-2-3 had a nifty
way to quickly paste down a long column in a 2D table. I forget now exactly
how it was done, but it involved only a few keyboard strokes using, I
believe, the arrow keys, END, and the decimal point or period key. I am sure
(hopefully) Excel has something just as easy, but I have never been able to
figure it out. I have tried using GOTO (cntrl-G) but no luck.
Here is a clarification of what I did with LOTUS: With the first cell in a
particular column selected, I would cntrl-C, then if the column was
continuous, a few keystrokes would instantly highlight the entire column,
ready for a paste operation. If the column was not continuous (or even
empty), but an adjacent or neighboring column was continuous, slightly
changing the keystrokes would still allow me to highlight my column as
before. It was very fast and automatic for those long, big spreadsheets.
How do the experts do this in Excel?
Thanks!
Boatman
way to quickly paste down a long column in a 2D table. I forget now exactly
how it was done, but it involved only a few keyboard strokes using, I
believe, the arrow keys, END, and the decimal point or period key. I am sure
(hopefully) Excel has something just as easy, but I have never been able to
figure it out. I have tried using GOTO (cntrl-G) but no luck.
Here is a clarification of what I did with LOTUS: With the first cell in a
particular column selected, I would cntrl-C, then if the column was
continuous, a few keystrokes would instantly highlight the entire column,
ready for a paste operation. If the column was not continuous (or even
empty), but an adjacent or neighboring column was continuous, slightly
changing the keystrokes would still allow me to highlight my column as
before. It was very fast and automatic for those long, big spreadsheets.
How do the experts do this in Excel?
Thanks!
Boatman