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Choose a bloody best answer. It's not hard.
How do you highlight a range of cells, then enter a formula into only one without losing the others?
I'm trying to set a matrix formula in a cell, and the answer will be a column vector. To get a column vector as the answer, first I have to highlight the number of cells that will be in the vector, otherwise the answer will only be generated in the cell with the formula.
How do I highlight several cells in a column, then enter a formula into the first one without the others being automatically un-selected?
Software4 years agoHow do you sign in to iTunes when it won't open a sign-in box?
On my MacBook, I'm trying to log in to iTunes, but there's no response when I select Account>Sign In. Is this a wide problem just now?
4 AnswersSoftware5 years agoHas the death of Geoff Gaherty been been noted here?
11 AnswersAstronomy & Space5 years agoIs there software that will identify a portrait or artwork?
2 AnswersSoftware5 years agoWhat word describes AABA form in Baroque/Classical?
4 AnswersClassical7 years agoWho here had a good start in astronomy thanks to John Dobson?
My first decent scope and renewed interest after years. Vale and thanks.
4 AnswersAstronomy & Space7 years agoFor those of you into The Beatles, what is your favourite song...?
...if you can narrow it down? I enjoy most of what they did in all their styles, but for me it's "Ob-La-Di". Full of hope and life, and the orchestration in their arrangement tops it off!
15 AnswersRock and Pop8 years agoI once heard Nielsen owed a lot to Brahms . . .?
How much was it, and did he pay him back?
Sorry. That's older than plainchant, but irresistible given that last Beethoven/Mozart question.
1 AnswerClassical9 years agoIs the moon's libration great enough that the Earth can be seen to "rise" and "set" anywhere?
This arises from someone's earlier question that got deleted while I was in the middle of answering it. The Earth in the moon's sky has a diameter of about 2 degrees of arc. Is the libration such that someone on the limb would see the whole disc rise above the horizon and sink below it?
3 AnswersAstronomy & Space1 decade ago