Excel.Tips.Net Welcome toExcel.Tips.Net

Helpful Links

Tips.Net Home
ExcelTips Home
Ask an Excel Question
Make a Comment

Tips.Net Store

ExcelTips FAQ
ExcelTips Premium

Learn Access Now
Free Printable Forms

Beauty Tips
Car Tips
Cleaning Tips
College Tips
Cooking Tips
Excel2007 Tips
ExcelTips
Family Tips
Gardening Tips
Health Tips
Home Tips
Legal Tips
Money Tips
Organizing Tips
Pest Tips
Pet Tips
Wedding Tips
Word2007 Tips
WordTips

Advertise on the
ExcelTips Site

Newest Tips

Recording a Macro

Adding a Little Animation to Your Life

Converting a Range of URLs to Hyperlinks

Making the Formula Bar Persistent

Engineering Calculations

Digital Signatures for Macros

Fixing the Decimal Point

 

Printing Columns and Rows

Summary: When you print something from Excel, you normally print an entire worksheet, a page, or a selected range of cells. If you want to print a row and a column (and nothing else), then you will need to prepare the worksheet for printing first. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, Excel 2003, and Excel 2007.)

Brent asked if it was possible to print a single column and a single row from a worksheet on the same piece of paper. (His boss wanted to see just the "crossed" information.) Unfortunately, there is no intrinsic way within Excel to specify to print only a single column and a single row. If you select both the column and row you want to print, and then choose to print just the selection, Excel still treats them as separate selections and prints them in that way. There are a couple of workarounds, however.

The first approach is to simply "hide" the information you don't want to print by setting its font color to white. You can do that by following these general steps:

  1. Choose the first range of cells you don't want to appear on the printout.
  2. Change the color of the text in those cells to white.
  3. Repeat steps 1 and 2 for each range you don't want on the printout.
  4. Print your worksheet as normal.
  5. Select the entire worksheet (press Ctrl+A).
  6. Change the color of the text in the cells to Automatic.

Another approach is to copy the row and column to a different worksheet. This is quick and easy to do using the keyboard (Ctrl+C to copy and Ctrl+V to paste), but there is a drawback. If the row or column you are copying contains formulas that rely on other areas of the worksheet, the copied data will not show the proper results. Thus, the best "cut and paste" approach would be as follows:

  1. Insert a new, blank worksheet in your workbook.
  2. Switch to the worksheet that contains the row and column you want to copy.
  3. Select the column you want to copy and press Ctrl+C.
  4. Switch to the new worksheet and select the column where you want it pasted.
  5. Choose Paste Special from the Edit menu. Excel displays the Paste Special dialog box. (Click here to see a related figure.) (To display the Paste Special dialog box in Excel 2007, make sure the Home tab of the ribbon is displayed, and then click the down-arrow under the Paste tool near the left side of the ribbon. Choose Paste Special from the resulting menu.)
  6. Select the Values radio button, then click on OK.
  7. Switch back to the worksheet that contains your original data.
  8. Select the row you want to copy and press Ctrl+C.
  9. Switch to the new worksheet and select the row where you want it pasted.
  10. Again display the Paste Special dialog box, as you did in step 5.
  11. Select the Values radio button, then click on OK.

ExcelTips is your source for cost-effective Microsoft Excel training. This tip (3029) applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007

Save Time! ExcelTips has been published weekly since late 1998. Past issues of ExcelTips are available in convenient ExcelTips archives. Have your own enhanced archive of ExcelTips at your fingertips, available to use at any time!
 
Check out ExcelTips Archives today!