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Assigning a Macro to a Keyboard Combination
Hiding Rows Based on a Cell Value
When the information you have in worksheet won't fit on a single page, Excel automatically breaks it up--at row or column boundaries--and prints the information on multiple pages. You can control the order in which Excel prints pages.
For instance, let's say the information in your worksheet is both too wide and too long to fit on a single sheet. Instead, the printed material will take four pages to print. The first page printed will always be the information at the top left corner of the print area. You can control whether Excel prints the information beneath page one as page two, or the information to the right of page one as page two. Follow these steps:
The steps are slightly different in Excel 2007:
ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (2979) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 2000 2002 2003 2007
More Power! For some people, the prospect of creating macros can be scary. Those who conquer their fears, however, find they become much more confident and productive once they learn how to make Excel do exactly what they want. ExcelTips: The Macros is an invaluable source for learning Excel macros. You are introduced to the topic in bite-sized chunks, pulled from past issues of ExcelTips. Learn at your own pace, exactly the way you want.