templates
The UK's Number 1 for Microsoft Office Training Add this page to your favourites/bookmarksBookmark page
 
View printable version of pagePrintable version
Plus One Google
Customer: Sign in
Delegate: Sign in
Trainer: Log in

Forum home » Delegate support and help forum » Microsoft Excel Training and help » Templates

Templates

resolvedResolved · Low Priority · Version 2003

replyReply Thu 29 Jan 2009, 17:17Delegate Prakash said...

Prakash has attended:
Project Intro Intermediate course
Excel Intermediate course

Templates

How many templates can you reasonably use?

For upcoming training course dates see: Pricing & availability

replyReply Fri 30 Jan 2009, 15:38Trainer Maggie said...

RE: Templates

Hi Prakash,

Thanks for your question and welcome to the forum.

The number of Templates you can reasonably use at one time is only effected by your computers memory, but provided this is not an issue you can use/save as many as you require.

Thanks and kind regards

Maggie

replyReply Fri 30 Jan 2009, 16:33Delegate Prakash said...

RE: Templates

Hi Maggie,

Thank you very much for the course. I found it really useful. Good luck with your plans later this year.

Prakash

 

Please browse our web site to find out more about
excel-training-courses and other Microsoft training courses.

Excel tip:

Convert Text to Columns in Excel 2010

If you have a cell in your Excel spreadsheet that contains a lot of text and you want to divide it into separate columns, this can only be done if there is a logical character which separates the text, for example, a comma.

Select the cells you would like to convert. On the Data tab, click Text to Columns. Choose the format of your current data.

Select Delimited if the text contains a logical character otherwise select Fixed Width if there are a certain number of spaces between each field.

Click Next when a preview of the data appears. Then select the type of character that separates the various fields. If the character is not listed, select Other and enter the character.

Click Next again and then choose the format for each of the columns. Select the column heading in the Data preview and then select a data type from the Column data format options.

Click Finish and the text will appear in several columns.

View all Excel hints and tips


Microsoft Certified Partner Accredited Training Provider: Institute of IT Training Institute of Leadership and Management - Certified Courses Security Seal verified by visa, mastercard securecard