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Excel Cursors

Excel cursors and their representation

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0% found this document useful (1 vote)
2K views1 page

Excel Cursors

Excel cursors and their representation

Uploaded by

avenger.aksu
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Excel Cursors

There are quite a few different types of cursors in Excel. Cursors are indicators of your mouse on the computer screen,
and different types of cursors allow for different actions or commands to be executed.

The “Select Mode” cursor is the most common in Excel. Use it to SELECT cells by clicking and
dragging, OR click on the row/column header to select the entire column or row.

The “Click and Drag” cursor allows you to cut and paste the contents from one cell into another
by clicking and dragging. To find the cursor, move your mouse to the outside borders of an
ACTIVE cell. Then, left click, hold, and drag with your mouse with this cursor to cut and paste a
cell.

The “AutoFill” cursor does two things: it copies and pastes the contents of one cell
to another cell, and it fills, or completes, a series (like dates, or days of the week)
You can only use this cursor if you place your mouse on the bottom right-hand
corner of an ACTIVE cell (this is called the FILL HANDLE). To AutoFill, click on the
fill handle with the AutoFill cursor then drag.

The “Resizing” cursor is used to resize columns and rows. To reveal this cursor,
move your mouse to the border lines separating a column or row, then click
and drag to resize. You can also double-click to autoFit the row or cell to the
exact length of the data inside of it.

The “I-beam” cursor appears when you are in an area where you can type text, or
begin data entry. To reveal this cursor, double click on any cell. An INSERTION
POINT INDICATOR will begin blinking inside of the cell, letting you know that you
can begin data entry.

This computer class was developed through NYC-Connected Communities, a


program coordinated by the NYC Department of Information Technology and
Telecommunications with funding from the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act’s Broadband Technology Opportunities Program

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