

What I wrote is that merged cells are problematic in worksheets, and once again it was in reference to Excel. These Communities are not intended to serve as 'chat rooms'. Why the Community moderator retained the reference to Word in the Subject I have no idea, but this conversation has been in the Mac Excel forum since the day it was posted. My reply was to the January 21 question tacked on to the original posting by hollyneilson. I sure wish Microsoft had put someone in charge of this task during the development of the Office Suite since 2006. Their objective was to everything with just four presses. Supposedly, at the height of its popularity there was a person on every project team at Palm whose job it was to count the stylus inputs required to accomplish every task. I never owned a Palm Pilot, but friends of mine did. Or a move my hand from the keyboard to the mouse, then b do 1 or 2 mouse clicks to display the Table Layout options, then c click Split cells, then d move my hand back to the keyboard. But most of the time, I have to use four key presses to bring it up Alt-release, J, L, P. Every so often, my fingers remember where it is, and I press it. Starting with 2007, that keystroke still works, but it is not shown anywhere in the interface. In Word versions before 2007, it was a single keystroke. What's more, there is a shortcut key that opens the Split Cells dialog box. If we need to merge cells, then we need to merge cells, and Word provides a way to do it. Your comment about merged cells not being useful is irrelevant. The question was about a Word table, but your answer is about Excel.

That method maintains the structural integrity of the worksheet.

If you don't mind some personal advice :- most experienced users of Excel recommend avoiding the use of merged cells altogether. The other replies in that conversation apparently were from users of Excel for Windows. However, you cannot assign custom keyboard shortcuts in Excel 2016. Supposing you want to combine two cells in your Excel sheet, A2 and B2, and both cells have data in them.Īs the Answer in that thread stated, there is no built-in keyboard shortcut for that purpose.

I don't care about obtaining detail about which value matches which. If somebody could help me out that would be great. Thanks again for saving me from having to search further! Many of the old threads have been read thousands of times. ※ Download: ?dl&keyword=shortcut+for+merge+and+center+in+excel&source=īy default, your hotkeys will be Alt + 4.
