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You'll want to apply color to attract attention to specific areas of a sheet and to identify purpose, category, and other important specifications. Used discretely and with specific intent, color can guide users through their work and help them work more efficiently. These three tips are easy ways to consider color when working with Excel sheets. Color tabs Adding descriptive text to sheet tabs is usually enough, but sometimes a bit of color can help - especially if your org already has a set of conventions that utilize color.
To add color to a tab, do the following:. Right-click the tab and choose Tab Color. Select a color from the resulting palette. If you're using Excel 2003, click OK. Move to another sheet and watch as Excel colors the tab. Change gridline color Gridlines are the cell outlines that you see on screen.
They don't print (by default) and they're not the same as borders. You can turn them off for individual sheets by clicking the View tab and unchecking Gridlines in the Show group. In Excel 2003, choose Options from the Tools menu, then, click the View tab and uncheck Gridlines in the Window Options section. Besides turning the display off and on, you can also change their color, as follows. Click the File tab and choose Options in the left pane (under Help). In Excel 2007, click the Office button and then click Word Options.
In Excel 2003, choose Options from the Tools menu. In the left pane, select Advanced. In Excel 2003, click the View tab. In the Display Options For This Worksheet section, choose a color from the Gridline Color dropdown. (Automatic is the default setting.). Click OK.
If you want to print gridlines, use the Page Setup dialog in the Backstage (File tab or Office button). Click the Sheet tab and check Gridlines in the Print section. Printing in black and white While we're discussing colors and printing, you might want to know that you don't have to print your sheets in color. In fact, unless you have a specific reason to do so, printing all those colors is expensive.
To print a colorful sheet in black and white, do the following.
The Chandra X-ray Center released a set of images in honor of the United Nations’ designation of 2015 as the International Year of Light. An expanding shell of debris called SNR 0519-69.0 is left behind after a massive star exploded in the Large Magellanic Cloud, a satellite galaxy to the Milky Way. Multimillion degree gas is seen in blue in X-rays from NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory. The outer edge of the explosion (red) and stars in the field of view are seen in visible light from the Hubble Space Telescope. This ethereal-looking image of the Orion Nebula was captured using the Wide Field Imager on the MPG/ESO 2.2-metre telescope at the La Silla Observatory, Chile. This nebula is much more than just a pretty face, offering astronomers a close-up view of a massive star-forming region to help advance our understanding of stellar birth and evolution.


The data used for this image were selected by Igor Chekalin (Russia), who participated in ESO's Hidden Treasures 2010 astrophotography competition. Igor's composition of the Orion Nebula was the seventh highest ranked entry in the competition, although another of Igor's images was the eventual overall winner. On July 11, 2010, the moon passed directly in front of the sun, causing a total solar eclipse in the South Pacific. The eclipse is shown (black and white) in a photo from the Williams College Expedition to Easter Island.
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Around it, in red, is an image of the sun's outer corona from the SOHO spacecraft. SOHO uses a disk to blot out the sun so that the faint outer corona can be studied. An image of the sun, taken at about the same time by the orbiting Solar Dynamics Observatory, was added in the middle. For the first time, astronomers say they've detected a superstorm in the atmosphere of an exoplanet, a planet about 60 percent the mass of Jupiter, orbiting a star about 150 light-years from Earth. In the journal Nature, the team of astronomers from the U.S. And the Netherlands wrote that in the atmosphere of the planet HD209458b, a super wind is blowing at a speed of about 3,100 to 6,200 mph. 'HD209458b is definitely not a place for the faint-hearted ‚' said Ignas Snellen, who led the team of astronomers.
The Hubble space telescope has observed a planet being swallowed by its parent star. This artist's concept shows the exoplanet WASP-12b, the hottest known planet in the Milky Way galaxy. According to NASA, the planet is so close to its sun-like parent star that tidal forces have stretched the planet into an egg shape and it's so hot that it has expanded to the point where its outer atmosphere 'spills into the star.' Scientists expect the star to consume the planet in 10 million years. Hubble can't get a clear photograph the planet because it's too far away, but this artist's rendering is partly based on observations made by the Cosmic Origins Spectrograph, a new instrument that was added to Hubble last year. One of Jupiter's two main cloud belts has completely disappeared, to the surprise of scientists who study the solar system's largest planet. 'This is a big event,' says planetary scientist Glenn Orton of NASA's Jet Propulsion Lab.
'We're monitoring the situation closely and do not yet fully understand what's going on.' The brown ring of clouds, known as the South Equatorial Belt (SEB), is twice as wide as Earth and more than twenty times as long. Orton thinks the belt may not have disappeared, but could instead be hidden behind other clouds. Scientists say the belt has faded out before.