News5 mins ago
Excel Gone Wrong
37 Answers
I have been working on a basic Excel spreadsheet, and I've pressed something and the entire layout has altered.
I had to save and close it, so how can I get it to go back to how it was please?
I had to save and close it, so how can I get it to go back to how it was please?
Answers
Best Answer
No best answer has yet been selected by andy-hughes. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.
For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.upload the image here:
https:/ /imgbb. com/
do not sign in or open an account, stay anonymous,follow the instructions click "start uploading" and it will display it's own version of windows explorer, find the screen shot as you did above, double click then click the upload button, once done it will display a link that you can copy, copy it and past into AB like any other link.
https:/
do not sign in or open an account, stay anonymous,follow the instructions click "start uploading" and it will display it's own version of windows explorer, find the screen shot as you did above, double click then click the upload button, once done it will display a link that you can copy, copy it and past into AB like any other link.
As I'm using Windows 7, I'm unable to check on whether TTT's suggestion will work. However I'm a bit concerned about the image format that might be used by a screenshot saved by that method. I've got a feeling that it might be something other tham .jpg (such as .png), which might not be accepted for upload to the web.
If you can't get that method to work, here's an alternative which (to the best of my knowledge) is univeral across all versions of Windows:
1. Press the Print Screen key (ON ITS OWN).
2. Open Paint. (You should find it listed, via the Start button, under Accessories).
3. Click Paste.
4. Go to 'Save As' (NOT just 'Save') and select Jpeg as the file format.
5. Save the image file to anywhere convenient on your computer (such as to the desktop).
6. Then upload to https:/ /imgbb. com/ as previously suggested.
If you can't get that method to work, here's an alternative which (to the best of my knowledge) is univeral across all versions of Windows:
1. Press the Print Screen key (ON ITS OWN).
2. Open Paint. (You should find it listed, via the Start button, under Accessories).
3. Click Paste.
4. Go to 'Save As' (NOT just 'Save') and select Jpeg as the file format.
5. Save the image file to anywhere convenient on your computer (such as to the desktop).
6. Then upload to https:/
Hopefully, if I've done it right - this is the link -
https:/ /ibb.co /WvvkVK H
Gentlemen - start your engines ...
https:/
Gentlemen - start your engines ...
I'm pleased. Sheet 1 shows your spreadsheet as you created it, and somehow there are various charts (i.e. graphs displaying the spreadsheet data) on other tabs. You may have created the charts on purpose or maybe not. Anyway, now you know what the bottom tabs are for. If you don't want any of the charts, you can delete them by right clicking the tab and left clicking delete.
The thing is there is nothing to "correct", the chart function is very powerful if you want to use that sort of thing. All you did was create various chart views of your data. The data itself remained constant and hiding in sheet1. if you can stand the excitement create a new sheet of a simple list then select all and play with the chart function, it should enable you to see what you actually did here. Excel is probably the most used officey type program on the planet and for good reason. They say that if a rogue state wanted to do the most damage to the world, they should stop excel working!