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The upper row of ‘orientation’ lines are how the text sit in the cell. The A and smaller A are how you increase and decrease font size easily. The last tool I use is the font modifier tools, which look like this: To adjust the width of an entire column, you grab the right-hand side of the column (Where it says A, B, C) and drag it with your cursor until it’s the right size. You can do the same thing with the columns as well. To make cell 3 bigger, you would grab the BOTTOM of cell 3, click, and drag to adjust the entire row’s height. In the cause of changing a row’s height, you would put your cursor between the cell numbers and drag to the appropriate height. If you want to change the size of your fields, grab them by the edge. This is what the female’s Project Master List chart looks like after she (somewhat) finished with it.Ĭlick here for a full-sized version of this image. Basically, highlight the cells you want to change, pick your colors from the color option, and then you’re done!
Bordertool name doesnt match how to#
Here is a step by step guide, in pictures, of how to change a cell’s background color.
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To change the color of the background of the cell, click on the cell in question, drag your cursor across to the other cells you want to be the same color, and then use the paint bucket tool to change the color to whatever you want. Without any fancy formatting, you should have something like this: She will once she has a few minutes to finalize them.
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Honestly, the female isn’t really using her start date and drafting deadline fields yet. This is what the female is using: Project This is what you will use to get “Project 1” and “Project Name” populated into the monthly sheets. The first step is to set up a Project Master List. Anyone with a spreadsheet program can do this. This looks complicated, but most people who have taken the dive and tried to make their own have finished their 100% customized-to-them version in a few hours. This is what the spreadsheet will look like when we’re finished.Ĭlick here for a full-sized version of the spreadsheet. She’ll be posting about it later today as soon as she confirms Amazon’s servers aren’t hiccuping anymore.) (Client from Hell is now up for preorder, readers. If this sort of thing doesn’t interest you, please have a good day. Please don’t ask her to a: make one for you or b: give you hers. The female created hers because the Raintree sheet didn’t do what she needed, and she figured there had to be others in the same boat she is in. It’s about ten dollars, and you can hit google for the Raintree writing tracker sheet, and you should find it easy peasy. If you want your own, please make it–or make use of the Raintree spreadsheet. By doing so, the female would have to troubleshoot it, hers isn’t even finished, and she is an author. (It is a headache day.) Please note that we are not offering the spreadsheet for download. The female was going to do this as a video, but the voice portion isn’t working and she’s not feeling up for fixing it. By that, we’re going to build a brand new spreadsheet with you. Dear humans, As there were a lot of questions and hesitancies about how to build the super fancy productivity spreadsheet, the Furred & Frond Management has decided to help out.
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