Black square and White circles - Handles in OLE

H

Hari Prasadh

Hi,

I had come across a post long time back (probably few months ?) in which a
person had explained very neatly the difference between White handles
(square in shape for increasing object dimensions) and Black handles
(squares - for increasing number of rows/columns visible) while
formatting/increasing the view area of Excel sheets.

I had taken a printout of the same and would like to forward a copy of that
post to my friend.

I did google the PPT group but couldnt come up with that post.

Could anybody please forward the google link to that post

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India
 
E

Echo S

Do you have any additional information from the printout? Subject line or
author or even the date of the post?
 
H

Hari Prasadh

Hi Echo,

You are Dead-Right. It is the same article by Paul D. Simon

(Sorry for the wrong lead to PPT group).

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India

Echo S said:
I think this may have been in excel.misc, not in the PPT group.

http://tinyurl.com/7jjv6

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com


Hari Prasadh said:
Hi,

I had come across a post long time back (probably few months ?) in which
a
person had explained very neatly the difference between White handles
(square in shape for increasing object dimensions) and Black handles
(squares - for increasing number of rows/columns visible) while
formatting/increasing the view area of Excel sheets.

I had taken a printout of the same and would like to forward a copy of that
post to my friend.

I did google the PPT group but couldnt come up with that post.

Could anybody please forward the google link to that post

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India
 
E

Echo S

I usually use the advanced groups search, and in this case I used
microsoft.public.* for the group -- maybe that will come in handy for you in
future. Oh, I also often use [ microsoft.public.*excel* ] (without the
brackets) for the group when I need to find something in one of the Excel
groups, for instance.

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com


Hari Prasadh said:
Hi Echo,

You are Dead-Right. It is the same article by Paul D. Simon

(Sorry for the wrong lead to PPT group).

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India

Echo S said:
I think this may have been in excel.misc, not in the PPT group.

http://tinyurl.com/7jjv6

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com


Hari Prasadh said:
Hi,

I had come across a post long time back (probably few months ?) in which
a
person had explained very neatly the difference between White handles
(square in shape for increasing object dimensions) and Black handles
(squares - for increasing number of rows/columns visible) while
formatting/increasing the view area of Excel sheets.

I had taken a printout of the same and would like to forward a copy of that
post to my friend.

I did google the PPT group but couldnt come up with that post.

Could anybody please forward the google link to that post

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India
 
H

Hari Prasadh

Hi Echo,

Thanks for the information.

Usually when I need to zilch some information I use Ron De bruin's Excel
add-in ( http://www.rondebruin.nl/Google.htm )

But I had a mental block (read as stubbornness) about this info being in PPT
group.

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India

Echo S said:
I usually use the advanced groups search, and in this case I used
microsoft.public.* for the group -- maybe that will come in handy for you
in
future. Oh, I also often use [ microsoft.public.*excel* ] (without the
brackets) for the group when I need to find something in one of the Excel
groups, for instance.

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com


Hari Prasadh said:
Hi Echo,

You are Dead-Right. It is the same article by Paul D. Simon

(Sorry for the wrong lead to PPT group).

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India

Echo S said:
I think this may have been in excel.misc, not in the PPT group.

http://tinyurl.com/7jjv6

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com


Hi,

I had come across a post long time back (probably few months ?) in which
a
person had explained very neatly the difference between White handles
(square in shape for increasing object dimensions) and Black handles
(squares - for increasing number of rows/columns visible) while
formatting/increasing the view area of Excel sheets.

I had taken a printout of the same and would like to forward a copy of
that
post to my friend.

I did google the PPT group but couldnt come up with that post.

Could anybody please forward the google link to that post

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India
 
R

Ron de Bruin

Hi Hari

There is a Word and PowerPoint version also now on my site

--
Regards Ron de Bruin
http://www.rondebruin.nl


Hari Prasadh said:
Hi Echo,

Thanks for the information.

Usually when I need to zilch some information I use Ron De bruin's Excel add-in ( http://www.rondebruin.nl/Google.htm )

But I had a mental block (read as stubbornness) about this info being in PPT group.

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India

Echo S said:
I usually use the advanced groups search, and in this case I used
microsoft.public.* for the group -- maybe that will come in handy for you in
future. Oh, I also often use [ microsoft.public.*excel* ] (without the
brackets) for the group when I need to find something in one of the Excel
groups, for instance.

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com


Hari Prasadh said:
Hi Echo,

You are Dead-Right. It is the same article by Paul D. Simon

(Sorry for the wrong lead to PPT group).

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India

I think this may have been in excel.misc, not in the PPT group.

http://tinyurl.com/7jjv6

--
Echo [MS PPT MVP]
http://www.echosvoice.com


Hi,

I had come across a post long time back (probably few months ?) in which
a
person had explained very neatly the difference between White handles
(square in shape for increasing object dimensions) and Black handles
(squares - for increasing number of rows/columns visible) while
formatting/increasing the view area of Excel sheets.

I had taken a printout of the same and would like to forward a copy of
that
post to my friend.

I did google the PPT group but couldnt come up with that post.

Could anybody please forward the google link to that post

Thanks a lot,
Hari
India
 
H

Hari Prasadh

Hi Ron,

Thnx.

I would pass on the information to my colleagues as well.

Regards,
Hari
India
 

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