Pressing the Return or Enter key, will move the cursor to the cell below the current one. You can actually change that in the settings to stay in the same cell or move up, left or right. Go to the Tools menu and then to Options and then to Edit and you will the option to change it there. The Tab key will move the cursor to the cell in the next column.
A new column or row will always go where the active cell is, or in the place of the row(s)/Column(s) selected. So if you want to put a column between column E and column F, the new column will be where column F now is, so you select column F, or put the active cell in it. It is better to have it selected. To do that, either click on the heading of the column, of with the active cell in the column, press and hold the Ctrl key and press the spacebar.
When you freeze, it freezes all rows above the active cell and all columns to the left of the active cell. The row and column that the active cell is in, does not get frozen. So, for example, to freeze Column A and Row 1, you would first put the cursor into cell B2.
In a Excel table (or spreadsheet), the intersection of a column and row is called a "cell." Where a column and row intersect you get a cell. The cell is reference by the column letter and the row number. So, for example, where column C meets row 15, is cell C15. You classify it by its column letter followed by the row number. Such as D3, B2, C5, etc.
when a virus enters a cell and is active, it cause the host cell to make new viruses, which destroy the host cell.
They are highlighted, so that they look different than the columns and rows that do not have a cell selected. This makes it easier for a user to know the address of the selected cell.
yes
Passive (just guessing)
1st answer: Active Cell 2nd answer: Section Break
Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.Using Ctrl-End will bring you to the lower right corner of the active area of the worksheet. It will put the cursor in the cell which is on the lowest row furthest right column. So if the last row you had something in was row 129 and the last column you had something in was column T, Ctrl-End would bring you toe cell T129. There would not necessarily be anything in that cell, but it is the cell in the last row and last column that there is data in.
A cell pointer in excel is just the cell where you point the cursor in which its row and column can be seen is called a cell pointer.
The ATP makes energy for a cell usually in active transport.
An "active virus" is when a virus enters a cell and is active, it causes the host cell to make new viruses. This process destroys the host cell. The steps are first, the virus attach's to a host cell. Second, the virus's hereditary material enters the host cell. Third, the virus's hereditary material causes the cell to make viral hereditary material and proteins. Fourth, new viruses from inside the host cell. Fifth, new viruses are released as the host cell bursts open and is destroyed. There are five steps on how a active virus functions inside a cell.