calendar template
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 » Calendar template

Calendar template

resolvedResolved · Medium Priority · Version 2003

replyReply Thu 9 Dec 2010, 16:35Delegate Peter said...

Peter has attended:
Excel Intermediate course

Calendar template

How do I find a calendar template to use and personalise?

For upcoming training course dates see: Pricing & availability

replyReply Sun 12 Dec 2010, 15:19Trainer Nafeesa said...

RE: calendar template

Hi Peter,


Thank you for your question.

To use an Excel 2003 calendar template:

- Open Excel

- Open the File menu & select New

- This will present the New Workbook Task Pane (right-hand side)

- In the 'Search Online For:' field type in your search criteria

*NB* you must have an internet connection, Excel will search Microsoft Office online.

- Select the preferred search result & download


I hope this resolves your question. If it has, please mark this question as resolved.


If you require further assistance, please reply to this post.


Regards,


Nafeesa

Microsoft Office Specialist Trainer

replyReply Sun 12 Dec 2010, 15:20Trainer Nafeesa said...

Will be marked as resolved in 5 days

Notice: This is an automated message. Due to inactivity, this forum post will be marked as 'resolved' if there are no further responses in the next 5 days.

Sun 19 Dec 2010: Automatically marked as resolved.

 

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

Excel tip:

Ctrl+d's double life

Suppose I have a formula in B1 that I wish to copy into B2:B10. I can select B1:B10 then press Ctrl+d to copy the formula down the selected range. Users generally ignore this shortcut in favour of double-clicking on the fill handle to copy down, but Ctrl+d is useful sometimes particularly when there is no data in surrounding columns to guide to how far the double-click method should copy formulae.

Ctrl+d has another use though. When I use the drawing toolbar to draw objects such as Text Boxes, Rectangles and Ovals onto a worksheet, Ctrl+d makes an instant duplicate of selected shapes. For example, I need five Text Boxes the same size. I draw one Text box and adjust it to the size I want, select it, then press Ctrl+d four times to get four identical copies.

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