This will only happen if there is something in the next cell. If the next cell is empty the text in the cell will seem to spill into it. If there is something in that cell, then you will only see text in the first cell up to the width of that cell. The full text is still contained within the cell, so it is not lost. To see it in full, you would widen out the column that the cell is in.
When the cell is not wide enough to display the numbers that are in it. Widening the column will enable you to see the numbers properly.
A series of # symbols will fill the cell to indicate it is not wide enough to display the contents.
I believe chart sheet.
There is no symbol for "actual" in Excel, but there is a function to display absolute value (ABS).
Yes. Excel can display numbers as percentages. Do you have a question?
If the contents of a cell are too big to display within that cell Excel will use empty cells to the right to display it in full. However, if adjacent cells aren't empty Excel will display ##### to indicate that the column is not wide enough to display the contents. Make the column wider by dragging the right hand border of the column header to the right. If you double click instead of dragging the column will re-size itself to accommodate the longest entry.
Press the F1 key and that will start the help system in Excel.
There is no symbol for "actual" in Excel, but there is a function to display absolute value (ABS).
8
The top layer of the OSI model; Application
If you see a cell with a lot of has symbols in it, like #####, it usually means the cell is not wide enough to display its contents. This normally applies to numbers, not text. If you widen the column that the cell is in, it will display the contents correctly.
Like all modern applications Excel has the capability to show things in various colours, so it can display characters in many colours.