Yes, unless the cells have been formatted already to be centre or right aligned.
For Word, it would be when you want to have text to the right, like sometimes parts of the top of a formal letter, where an address or a date might be aligned to the right. In Excel, numbers are aligned to the right, but text is to the left. Sometimes you might want the headings in cells to be aligned to the right to be closer to the values they are acting as headings for.
It will depend on the formatting of the cell and the type of values that are put in. Excel can detect these things. Text is normally aligned to the left while numbers are normally aligned to the right. The user can then change the alignment if they like.
what do you do if your hip is not aligned the right way
There is no definitive answer to that. Normally text labels are aligned to the left, particularly at the start of rows. Over columns they may be centred. However, there are no set rules, so you can align them the way you want as long as it is clear and consistent.
Left aligned.
Yes.
The motto of No Labels is 'Not Left. Not Right. Forward.'.
it depends are you talking about keyboarding values and labels or just regular values and labels.keyboarding is what a letter or number is worth labels are organizing words that are more than likely used on banisters and poster or tabs on folders same thing goes for life labels.regular values are life treasures or family treasures or something that means allot to someone.
Numbers are aligned to the right in a cell by default.
Not usually. Documents generally are left-aligned for English and related languages, while they could be right-aligned for other appropriate languages.
Text is usually aligned to the left and numbers are usually aligned to the right.