Parts of MS Excel Window

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Parts of MS Excel Window

Microsoft Excel XP is a spreadsheet application in the Microsoft Office suite. A


spreadsheet is an accounting program for the computer. The primary purpose of a
spreadsheet is to work with numbers and text. Spreadsheets can be used to organize
data like alphabetizing a list of named or sorting records, as well as to calculate and
analyze data using mathematical formulas,

Basic Parts of Microsoft Excel Window


Some parts of the Excel window (such as Ribbon and scroll bars) are standard in most
other Microsoft programs. However, other features are more specific to spreadsheets,
like the formula bar, worksheet tabs, and name box.

The following are the basic parts of the Microsoft Excel Window:

1. Quick Access Toolbar


2. File Tab
3. Title Bar
4. Control Buttons
5. Menu Bar
6. Ribbon/Toolbar
7. Dialog Box Launcher
8. Name Box
9. Formula Bar
10. Scroll Bars
11. Spreadsheet Area
12. Leaf Bar
13. Column Bar
14. Row Bar Cells
15. Cells
16. Status Bar
17. View Buttons
18. Zoom control

1. Quick Access Toolbar


This toolbar is located in the upper left corner of the screen. Its objective is to show the
most frequently used Excel commands. We can customize this toolbar based on our
preferred commands.

2. File Tab
Excel 2007's Office button has been replaced by the File tab. We can click it to check the
Backstage view, where we can open or save files, create new sheets, print sheets,
and perform other file-related operations.

3. Title Bar
The title bar of the spreadsheet is at the top of the window. It displays the active
document's name.

4. Control Buttons
Control buttons are the symbols that are present in the upper-right side of the window,
enabling us to change the labels, minimize, maximize, share, and close the sheet.

5. Menu Bar
Under the diskette or save icon or the excel icon (this will depend on the version of
the program), labels or bars which enable changing the sheet which is shown. These
are the menu bar and contain a File, Insert, Page Layout, Formulas, Data, Review,
View, Help, and a Search Bar with a light bulb icon. These menus are divided into
subcategories which simplify the distribution of information and analysis of calculations.

6. Ribbon/Toolbar
Each menu bar contains several different elements. On the selection of the menu, a
sequence of command options/icons will show on a ribbon. For example, if we select
the "Home" tab, we will see cut, copy, paste, bold, italic, underline,
and more commands. In the same way; we can click on the "Insert" tab, we will
see tables, illustrations, additional, recommended graphics, graphics maps, among
others. On the other hand, if we select the "Formulas" option. Insert functions, auto
sum recently used, finances, logic, text, time, date, etc.

Ribbon/Toolbar is a set of commands organized into three sections.

o Tabs
They are the Ribbon's top part, and they include groups of related commands. Ribbon
tabs include Home, Insert, Page Layout, Formula, Data.
o Groups
They organize related commands; the name of each group is displayed below the
Ribbon. For example, a set of commands related to fonts or a group of commands
related to alignment, etc.
o Commands
They appear within each group, as previously stated.

7. Dialog Box Launcher


Dialog box launcher is a very little down arrow that is present in the lower-right corner
of a command group on the Ribbon. By clicking on this arrow, we can explore more
options related to the concerned group.

8. Name box
Show the location of the active cell, row, or column. We have the option of selecting
multiple options.

9. Formula Bar
Formula bar permits us to observe, insert or edit the information/formula entered in the
active cell.

10. Scrollbars
Scrollbars are the tools that enable us to move the document's
vertical and horizontal views. We can activate this by clicking on the platform's internal
bar or the arrows we have on the sides. Additionally, we can use the mouse wheel in
order to automatically scroll up or down: or use the directional keys.
11. Spreadsheet Area
It is the place where we enter our data. It includes all the rows, cells, columns,
and built-in data in the spreadsheet. We can use shortcuts to perform toolbar activities
or formulas of arithmetic operations (add, subtract, multiply, etc.). The insertion
point is the blinking vertical bar known as the "cursor." It specifies the insertion
location of the typing.

12. Leaf Bar


Leaf bar is present at the bottom of the spreadsheet, which says sheet1 is shown. This
sheet bar describes the spreadsheet which is currently being worked on. Using this, we
can alternate a number of sheets or add a new one as per our convenience.

13. Columns Bar


Columns are a vertically ordered series of boxes across the full sheet. This column bar is
located below the formula bar. The letters of the alphabet are used to label the columns.
Begin with the letter A to Z, and then after Z, it will continue as AA, AB, and so on. The
number of columns that can be used is limited to 16,384.

14. Rows Bar


The row bar is the left part of the sheet where a sequence of numbers is expressed.
Begin with number one (1), and further rows will be added as we move the pointer
down. There are a total of 1,048,576 rows available.

15. Cells
Cells are those parallelepipeds that divide the spreadsheet into many pieces, separating
rows and columns. A spreadsheet's first cell is represented by the first letter of the
alphabet and the number one (A1).

16. Status Bar


The status bar is present at the bottom of the window that displays critical information.
It also indicates whether something is incorrect or whether the document is ready to be
printed or delivered.
This shows the result of the selected digits such as sum, average, count, maximum,
minimum, etc.

By right-clicking on the status bar, we can configure the status bar. Any command


from the specified list can be added or removed.

17. View Buttons


View buttons are a set of three buttons arranged at the left of the Zoom control, close
the screen's right-bottom corner. We can see three different kinds of sheet views in
Excel using this method.

o Normal View: - Normal view displays the Excel page in normal view.
o Page Layout View: - The Page Layout view shows the precise layout of an Excel page it
will be printed.
o Page Break View: - This displays page break preview before printing.

18. Zoom Control


The zoom control is present at the lower-right side of the window. It enables us
to ZOOM-IN or ZOOM-OUT a specific area of the spreadsheet. It is represented by
magnifying icons with the symbols of maximizing (+) or minimizing (-).

The various modern versions contain a segment with the icons of more and less, as well
as an element that separates the two alternatives, which permits us to manipulate them
by clicking on any of these.

On the other side, it also explains in percentage how many times the document has
been moved or approached. Microsoft Excel 2019 enables us to zoom out up to
10% and zoom up to 400%.
MS-Word Interface and editing document
Various window elements of MS- Word

 Title bar
 Menu Bar
 Toolbars
 Workspace
 Status Bar
 Scroll Bars
 Scroll Box
 Task Pane

Exploring the Word Interface

Components of the Word Window

Besides the usual PC window components (close box, title bar, scroll bars,
etc.), a Word window has other elements

Component Functionality or Purpose of the Component

Menu Bar Contains File,Edit, View, Insert, Format, Tools, Table, Window and Help menus

Standard Contains icons for shortcuts to menu commands.


Toolbar

Formatting Tool Contains pop-up menus for style, font, and font size; icons for boldface, italic, and underline; alignment
Bar icons; number and bullet list icons; indention icons, the border icon, highlight, and font color icons.

Ruler Ruler on which you can set tabs, paragraph alignment, and other formats.

Insertion Point Blinking vertical bar that indicates where text you type will be inserted. Don’t confuse the insertion point
with the mouse I-beam. To move the insertion point, just click the mouse where you want the point
moved.

End-of-File Non-printing symbol that marks the end of the file. You cannot insert text after this mark.
Marker
Selection Bar Invisible narrow strip along the left edge of the window. Your mouse pointer changes to a right-pointing
(Gutter) arrow when it is in this area. It is used to select a line, a paragraph, or the entire document.

Split Handle Double-click to split the window in two (to view different portions of the same file). Double-click to return
to one window

Status Bar Displays page number, section number, and total number of pages, pointer position on page and time of
day.

Task Pane Displays and groups commonly used features for convenience.

Office Assistant An animated character that can provide help and suggestions. There are multiple characters to choose
from, and it is possible to turn the Office Assistant off.

A blank document, ready to type in.

Callout 1 The first document you open is called Document1 in the title bar at
the top of the window.
Callout 2 The menu bar. The File menu is the first one on the left.
Callout 3 The Standard and Formatting toolbars.
Callout 4 The insertion point.

When you start Word, a new file opens. That file is called a document.


Above the document you’ll see the menu bar and the toolbars displayed
across the top of the window, as shown in the illustration.

If you’ve already started Word, you create a new document by


clicking New on the File menu. In the New Document task pane that
opens, click Blank document.

In the upper-left corner of the document, or page, is the insertion point, a


blinking vertical line. The first thing you type will appear there. You can start
further down the page if you want to by pressing ENTER until the insertion
point is where you want the first line to begin. As you type, the insertion
point moves to the right.

If you’re typing a letter, you might start by typing the date. After that, press
ENTER to move the insertion point down the page one line.
If there’s an address, you might add a few empty lines before you type.
Press ENTER several times, until the insertion point is where you want it.
Then type the first line of the address, press ENTER, type the next line,
press ENTER, and so on. Then type the greeting.

When you type the body of the letter, if you want to indent the first line of a
paragraph, you can do that by pressing the TAB key on your keyboard to
move the insertion point one-half inch to the right.

Go ahead and type. When you get to the end of the first line, you don’t have
to press ENTER, as you would if you were using a typewriter; Word takes
care of that for you. Just continue to type. Whatever you are typing will
continue on to the next line.

You do press ENTER to start another paragraph.

–Microsoft

Editing Text
Text editing enables you to delete, move, and copy or paste text in your
document. The Clipboard is a piece of memory to store temporarily anything
which is copied or cut and multiple items can be held.

Copy, Cut and Pasting


To copy to the clipboard, select it then click the Edit menu and choose Copy,
or simply press Ctrl + C together.
To cut use Ctrl + X together  and for pasting the data, either select edit
menu and choose the Paste option, or together press Ctrl + V.

Text can also be moved by drag and drop by

 Turn on drag-and-drop editing by On the Tools menu, click Options, and then
click the Edit tab.
 Select or clear the Drag-and-drop text editing check box.
 Select the item we want to move or copy.
 If we want to move the item, drag the selection to the location we want, else
if we want to copy the item, hold down CTRL as we drag the selection.

Office Clipboard
Clipboard manager is a special tool that records everything that you copy to
the clipboard. It remembers 24 last copied items. It is shown by

 Hold down the Ctrl key and press C twice – the task pane will open and the
clipboard will be displayed
 From the Task pane, select Clipboard from the drop down menu
 From the Edit menu, select Office Clipboard
 From the Options menu on the Clipboard Task pane, select Show Office
Clipboard Automatically and deselect Collect Without Showing Office
Clipboard – when you copy more than one item, the Clipboard will appear.

Deleting Text

The easiest way to remove text is with the help of Backspace or Delete keys.

Undo and Redo Text


Any recent change made to the document can be undone either by the undo
button on standard toolbar or by pressing “Control + Z” keyboard shortcut.
Similarly to repeat a recent action click on redo button or by using “Control
+ Y” key combination.

Insert Mode
In insert mode new characters are inserted into the existing text by moving
the existing text to the right to make space for the new characters.

Finding and Replacing Text


To find and replace text first type the text that has to be replaced in the first
text box then type the below this is another text box, here type the text
which will replace the text in the above box. Shortcut for find is “Control +
F” and for replace is “Control+H”

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