| Excel's AutoFormat feature takes away some of the hard work involved in formatting a worksheet. AutoFormat provides you with 16 predesigned table formats that you can apply to a selected range of cells on a worksheet. Instead of applying each format to your data, one at a time, you can apply a group of formats in one shot with one of Excel's predesigned formats. The AutoFormat command lets you select a format and transform your table with a couple of mouse clicks. In this To Do exercise, you get to try out a predesigned format using the AutoFormat command. To Do: Apply an AutoFormat -
Select the cells that contain the data you want to format; in this case, select cells A3:D9. -
Choose Format, AutoFormat. The AutoFormat dialog box pops open , as shown in Figure 10.10. You see a palette of predesigned table format samples, each with a name . Figure 10.10. Predesigned table formats in the AutoFormat dialog box. -
Scroll through the table format samples. Stop at the List 2 sample. -
Click the List 2 sample table format. | | To view the elements that make up the selected table format, click the Options button. You can turn off any Format option to customize the look of the table format. | -
Click OK. Excel formats your table to make it look like the one in the sample you selected. It looks great! -
Click any cell to deselect the range. Figure 10.11 shows the table formatted with the List 2 AutoFormat. The green bars make the worksheet more attractive and readable. Figure 10.11. The worksheet formatted with the List 2 AutoFormat. | | What if you don't like what AutoFormat did to your worksheet? No problem. To remove a prefab format, press Ctrl+Z to undo the format. | |