Computer Science, asked by svetaKumari, 1 month ago

give one word answer
1)Cell reference in a formula always refers
to a cell in a specified location?
3)Which cell reference is the mixture of relative and absolute cell reference?
4)Ctrl+A is used for?
5)F5 is used for?​

Answers

Answered by bajajpriyanka
0

Answer:

There are two types of cell references: relative and absolute. Relative and absolute references behave differently when copied and filled to other cells. Relative references change when a formula is copied to another cell. Absolute references, on the other hand, remain constant no matter where they are copied.By default, all cell references are relative references. When copied across multiple cells, they change based on the relative position of rows and columns. For example, if you copy the formula =A1+B1 from row 1 to row 2, the formula will become =A2+B2. Relative references are especially convenient whenever you need to repeat the same calculation across multiple rows or columnsIn the following example, we want to create a formula that will multiply each item's price by the quantity. Rather than create a new formula for each row, we can create a single formula in cell D2 and then copy it to the other rows. We'll use relative references so the formula correctly calculates the total for each item.

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