On 10/5/08 2:50 PM, in article 59b5b4c6.1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
"citizen_matt@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
" <citizen_matt@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> Hmm, I certainly didn't create multiple panes. And I don't think scroll
lock
> is on, but how would I tell?
>
>> On 10/2/08 9:02 PM, in article 59b5b4c6.-1@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>> "citizen_matt@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
" wrote:
>>
>>> Version: 2008
>>> Operating System: Mac OS X 10.4 (Tiger)
>>> Processor: Power PC
>>>
>>> I've been using Excel 2004 on my home computer, but recently worked on
some
>>> do***ents on a different computer where I had just installed Excel
2008.
>>> When
>>> I went back to my normal computer, a strange thing started happening
with
>>> Excel:
>>>
>>> When I navigate to a different cell with arrow keys, the display stays
on
>>> the
>>> top left area of the worksheet, even if I navigate to a cell that lies
>>> outside
>>> that area.
>>>
>>> If I am working in an area of the worksheet outside that default top
left
>>> position, and hit return, the display changes to the top left
position, even
>>> though the selected cell is elsewhere. When I hit return again, the
display
>>> goes back to where I was. This is now a problem with this worksheet on
both
>>> computers, with both versions of Excel.
>>>
>>> This a very strange, annoying feature, and I can't seem to find
anything in
>>> the preferences to switch it off. Has anyone experienced this? Is
there a
>>> way
>>> to turn it off so I can actually see the cells that I've selected?
>> It sounds to me like scroll lock is turned on. Or, did you create
multiple
>> panes and have the panes frozen?
>>
>> --
>> Bob Greenblatt [MVP], Macintosh
>> bobgreenblattATmsnDOTcom
>>
>>
If there are multiple panes the window title bar will say file name:1 2,
3,
etc. If scroll lock is on, you'll see it in the lower right status area of
the window.
--
Bob Greenblatt [MVP], Macintosh
bobgreenblattATmsnDOTcom


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