Comppletly
  Home FAQ Contact Sign in
 
Advanced search
MATCHING GROUPS



more...
POPULAR GROUPS

more...

found 27 articles for 0.303 sec
alrighty then,corrected 1 of the Melbourne spellings and voila! Melbourne now auto-completes..hehe..simple as that hey,thanks a million for your time and help Fred. cheers :) "Fred Smith" wrote: > The only way I know of to edit the entries in the autocomplete list is to > not enter them in the first place. The list is composed only of other > entries in that column. If you have vaious     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: jm
Date: Aug 5, 2008 23:43

The only way I know of to edit the entries in the autocomplete list is to not enter them in the first place. The list is composed only of other entries in that column. If you have vaious spellings of Melbourne in the column, correct them and the autocomplete list should update. You could try turning off autocomplete (Tools>Options...) and turning it back on to see if that has any effect
Show full article (4.08Kb) · Show article thread
"Fred Smith" wrote: > I would agree that Excel should be able to complete the word for you. From > what you've said, there's no reason Excel shouldn't autocomplete. > > One trick you can try is to use Alt+down arrow. This will display the items > in the autocomplete list for that column. Maybe this will help you determine > the problem. > > Sorry I couldn't be of more help. >     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: Fred Smith
Date: Aug 5, 2008 21:15

I would agree that Excel should be able to complete the word for you. From what you've said, there's no reason Excel shouldn't autocomplete. One trick you can try is to use Alt+down arrow. This will display the items in the autocomplete list for that column. Maybe this will help you determine the problem. Sorry I couldn't be of more help. Regards, Fred. "jm" <jm@discussions.microsoft
Show full article (3.68Kb) · Show article thread
"Fred Smith" wrote: > What's the word? > Are there any blank cells between the complete word and the cell you are > typing in? > Are there any similar words that start with the same letters (therefore > making it difficult for Excel to decide which one)? > Is there a lot of recalculation involved after you enter data in a cell? > > Regards, > Fred. > > "jm" <jm@discussions.microsoft     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: jm
Date: Aug 5, 2008 20:48

hi all,i have a problem with excel2003 and all help would be much appreciated.anyways,i enter quite a bit of data in excel and certain words in some columns are repeated,meaning they are exactly the same.when a word is typed in a column and has been previously entered,excel will remember it. eg:/ I start typing the word SYD excel will auto-complete the word 'SYDNEY'.excel remembers pretty
Show full article (2.93Kb) · Show article thread
On 2008-06-19 13:23:08 +0100, The Natural Philosopher <a@b.c> said: >> > It all stems from the change from 'socialism means a safetey net below > which no person shall be allowed to fall' tpo 'socialism means that no > one is allowed to get better treatment than any one else, even if they > could easily afford it' > > > hence my view that the simplest option is to underwrrite everyones     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: Fred Smith
Date: Aug 5, 2008 17:54

On 2008-06-19 13:23:08 +0100, The Natural Philosopher <a@b.c> said: It all stems from the change from 'socialism means a safetey net below which no person shall be allowed to fall' tpo 'socialism means that no one is allowed to get better treatment than any one else, even if they could easily afford it' hence my view that the simplest option is to underwrrite everyones
Show full article (2.21Kb) · Show article thread
Matt Giwer <jul...@tampabay.REMover.rr.com> wrote: > The lack of DNA is a very big hint. Lack, huh? If you were going to look for a DNA contribution, how would you go about it? Seriously. How would you go about looking for a genetic contribution from Neanderthals? Certainly you WOULD NOT perform any of the testing that has been done.... > The only reason for the invention     

Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: jm
Date: Aug 4, 2008 22:39

Show full article (1.64Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: microsoft.public.excel.misc · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in microsoft.public.excel.misc
Author: jm
Date: Aug 4, 2008 20:56

Show full article (0.72Kb)
    

Group: cam.misc · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in cam.misc
Author: Andy Hall
Date: Jun 19, 2008 06:25

Show full article (0.88Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: uk.diy · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in uk.diy
Author: Andy Hall
Date: Jun 19, 2008 06:25

Show full article (0.88Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: soc.history.ancient · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in soc.history.ancient
Author: JTEM
Date: Dec 3, 2007 11:49

Show full article (3.57Kb) · Show article thread
    

Group: macromedia.flash.sitedesign · Group Profile · Search for Comppletly in macromedia.flash.sitedesign
Author: ac online
Date: May 9, 2007 07:24

Show full article (0.32Kb)
1 · 2 · 3 · next