![]() |
space after subtotal in report
is there a way to add a line or space after a subtotal?
I am new at Excel, so be gentle. I can do it in a heartbeat in Word or Access... I'm in a whole new world. thank you... |
space after subtotal in report
Are you talking about a blank row
"LindaB@work" wrote: is there a way to add a line or space after a subtotal? I am new at Excel, so be gentle. I can do it in a heartbeat in Word or Access... I'm in a whole new world. thank you... |
space after subtotal in report
Yes, they would like a blank row after the total line of each client.
Once this is solved, I have lots more questions. Thank you for your assistance. Linda "Jonathan Cooper" wrote: Are you talking about a blank row "LindaB@work" wrote: is there a way to add a line or space after a subtotal? I am new at Excel, so be gentle. I can do it in a heartbeat in Word or Access... I'm in a whole new world. thank you... |
space after subtotal in report
Assuming you are not using Excel's build in subtotals routine, and that you
are just manually adding up a bunch of cells, this is a simple fix. lets say your subtotal is on row 10. with your mouse, right click on row 11 (literally, I want you to right click on the '11' at the extreme left hand side of Excel). Then left click on INSERT. This will insert a blank row. "LindaB@work" wrote: Yes, they would like a blank row after the total line of each client. Once this is solved, I have lots more questions. Thank you for your assistance. Linda "Jonathan Cooper" wrote: Are you talking about a blank row "LindaB@work" wrote: is there a way to add a line or space after a subtotal? I am new at Excel, so be gentle. I can do it in a heartbeat in Word or Access... I'm in a whole new world. thank you... |
space after subtotal in report
I was using the subtotals routine, and cannot find a way to automatically add
the line after the total. In this way, I will have the line without the extra cells on my spreadsheet. Thank you. Linda "Jonathan Cooper" wrote: Assuming you are not using Excel's build in subtotals routine, and that you are just manually adding up a bunch of cells, this is a simple fix. lets say your subtotal is on row 10. with your mouse, right click on row 11 (literally, I want you to right click on the '11' at the extreme left hand side of Excel). Then left click on INSERT. This will insert a blank row. "LindaB@work" wrote: Yes, they would like a blank row after the total line of each client. Once this is solved, I have lots more questions. Thank you for your assistance. Linda "Jonathan Cooper" wrote: Are you talking about a blank row "LindaB@work" wrote: is there a way to add a line or space after a subtotal? I am new at Excel, so be gentle. I can do it in a heartbeat in Word or Access... I'm in a whole new world. thank you... |
space after subtotal in report
You can still insert a row manually. There is no pedestrian way to
automatically insert a blank row. If you want to go the macro route, I suggest you repost in this forum. But provide more description on what you specifically are looking to do. I'm could almost help, but still learning VBA. "LindaB@work" wrote: I was using the subtotals routine, and cannot find a way to automatically add the line after the total. In this way, I will have the line without the extra cells on my spreadsheet. Thank you. Linda "Jonathan Cooper" wrote: Assuming you are not using Excel's build in subtotals routine, and that you are just manually adding up a bunch of cells, this is a simple fix. lets say your subtotal is on row 10. with your mouse, right click on row 11 (literally, I want you to right click on the '11' at the extreme left hand side of Excel). Then left click on INSERT. This will insert a blank row. "LindaB@work" wrote: Yes, they would like a blank row after the total line of each client. Once this is solved, I have lots more questions. Thank you for your assistance. Linda "Jonathan Cooper" wrote: Are you talking about a blank row "LindaB@work" wrote: is there a way to add a line or space after a subtotal? I am new at Excel, so be gentle. I can do it in a heartbeat in Word or Access... I'm in a whole new world. thank you... |
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 05:53 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
ExcelBanter.com