excel2007.Tips.Net Welcome toExcel2007.Tips.Net

Helpful Links

Excel 2007 Home
Tips.Net Home

Ask a Question
Make a Comment

Car Tips
Excel2007 Tips
ExcelTips
Money Tips

Newest Tips

Changing a Link's Source

Using Conditional Formatting to Shade Rows

Editing by Moving and Copying

Making Sure Duplicate Names Aren't Entered

Applying a Conditional Format to a Full Row

Hiding Worksheet Tabs

Making Cells Flash

 

Opening a New Workbook Window

Summary: If you need to look at different parts of the same worksheet at the same time, the answer is to create windows for your data. It is easy to do, as described in this tip.

If you want to work on two different parts of the same workbook at the same time, there are a couple of different ways you can do so. One way is to open a second window. You do this by displaying the View tab of the ribbon and clicking New Window in the Window group. Excel opens a new window. You can then use each window to display and edit different parts of the same workbook.

Notice that each new window you create has not only the workbook name in the title bar, but also a number that indicates the actual window number. Thus, you could have Book1:1 and Book1:2. These are the same way that the window names appear on the Task bar and on the Switch Windows drop-down list of the ribbon's View tab.

Each window created in this way just provides a different way to look at the exact same workbook. This means that any change you make in one window is automatically and immediately made in the other window as well.

Related Tips:

Step Up and Take Control! Subscribers to WordTips know just how valuable a resource it is. WordTips Premium provides twice the number of exceptional, easy-to-understand tips every week in an ad-free newsletter, as well as substantial discounts on WordTips archives and e-books. Check out WordTips Premium today!