archtama.blogg.se

Mac switching between windows
Mac switching between windows










mac switching between windows

When in the formula bar, move the cursor to the end of the text Shift-PgDn / Shift-PgUp or Shift-Fn-down arrow / Shift-Fn-up arrowĮxtend selection to the beginning of a rowĮxtend selection to the beginning of the worksheetĬontrol-Shift-Home or Control-Shift-Fn-left arrowįinish entering data in a cell and move to the next cell down / up If more than one worksheet is open, switch to the next one Switch between the worksheet, the Ribbon, the task pane, and Zoom controls Move to the word to the right while in a cell

mac switching between windows mac switching between windows

Move to the word to the left while in a cell Move to the last cell that has content in it Move one worksheet tab to the left / rightĬontrol-Page Down / Control-Page Up or Option-right arrow / Option-Left arrow Option-Page Up / Option-Page Down or Fn-Option-up arrow / Fn-Option-down arrow Page Up / Page Down or Fn-down arrow / Fn-up arrow Spell-check the active worksheet or selected range Useful Excel keyboard shortcuts Source: Microsoft Action Note: On Macs, the ⌘ key is the same as the Command or Cmd key. For even more shortcuts, see Microsoft’s Office site. Most work whether you’re using a subscription (Microsoft 365/Office 365) or non-subscription version of Excel. We’ve listed the shortcuts we’ve found the most useful below.

mac switching between windows

(Fewer shortcuts are available for the Mac, but you can create your own custom keyboard shortcuts if you like.) There are keyboard shortcuts to accomplish a vast array of tasks in the Excel desktop client, in both the Windows and Mac versions. Why bother to lift your hands from the keyboard if you want to open or close a file, apply formatting to cells, navigate through workbooks, undo and redo actions, calculate all worksheets in all open workbooks, and more? With keyboard shortcuts you won’t have to. Excel’s Ribbon is great for finding everything you might ever want to do in a spreadsheet, particularly things you don’t do frequently, like managing and querying data connections or automatically grabbing geographic statistics from the internet and inserting them into cells.īut if you’re looking to do things fast, you’ll find keyboard shortcuts far more useful.












Mac switching between windows