App Sheets Getting Started
App Sheets Getting Started
Once you know the basics on how to access, create, and edit Google Docs, read here to learn the
basics that apply specifically to Google Docs spreadsheets.
Create a spreadsheet
From Google Drive (or your Docs list if Drive is not yet enabled), click the Create button and select
Spreadsheet.
Tip: Don’t forget to rename your new spreadsheet. To do so, just click the name (which should be “Untitled
spreadsheet” at this point).
Use the menus and toolbar to format the selected cells in your spreadsheet.
You can format your data as currency, percent, dates, times, plain text (where numbers are treated as text
instead of numerical values to be interpreted), or other formatting options:
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Work with rows, columns, and sheets
The building blocks of a spreadsheet are rows and columns of cells filled with data. Each grid of rows and
columns is an individual sheet.
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Tip: To add multiple rows or columns at one time, first select the number of rows or columns you want
to add. The Insert menu will then give you the option to add that many rows or columns. For example, if
you select a block of 2 columns by 3 rows, the Insert menu shows these options:
2. On the menu bar, click Edit and then choose which rows or columns to delete. For example, if you
selected rows 4, 5, and 6 in column C, you’ll see these options:
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Tip: If you only want to delete the data in the cells (but still keep all the existing rows and columns),
select Delete values.
3. Hold down the mouse button and drag the cells to their new location.
4. Release the mouse button to drop the cells in their new location.
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Just click View > Freeze rows (or View > Freeze columns), and then select the number of rows to freeze.
In the example below, the top 2 rows are frozen. You can tell by the thicker line beneath Row 2:
Tip: You can also drag and drop the blue line sections to quickly change the number of frozen rows or columns.
Once frozen, your headers will stay in place as you move about your spreadsheet, and they won’t be sorted if you
sort a column.
A convenient way to handle multiple related spreadsheets is to use Google Docs “sheets.” Sheets let you open
one Google Spreadsheet and quickly jump back and forth between the related sheets, similar to how you might
use tabs in a browser to jump between different web sites.
2. By default, sheets are named Sheet1, Sheet2, Sheet3 and so on, so you’ll probably want to rename the
new sheet. Select the tab for the new sheet, click the drop-down arrow, and select Rename:
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Tip: The quickest way to re-order sheets is to drag and drop the tabs.
To use the data from other cells in your functions, refer to the cells by column number followed by row number
(A6, C2, and so on). For example, here’s how to use the SUM function to add the cells directly above it:
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3. The SUM function is inserted in the cell:
4. Select the range of cells you want to add. The cell range (D2 to D5 in this example) is added to your SUM
function:
To get started sharing a spreadsheet, click the Share button at the top right of the page. See Google Docs
Sharing and Collaboration to learn more about sharing settings.
There are a couple differences about collaborating in spreadsheets compared to text documents: only one person
can edit a cell at any given time, and comments are stored with individual cells. These differences are described
below.
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With Google Spreadsheets, you don't have to worry about overriding edits made by someone else. A cell will be
greyed out while it’s being modified by someone else:
If you try to edit a greyed out cell, your changes won’t stick.
4. Click into another cell. You’ll see that the cell you commented on now has an orange triangle in the
upper-right corner to indicate comments:
5. If you want to add another comment, follow the steps above. New comments for a cell are added above
the older comments.
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6. To see comments, just hover over the cell:
7. When you’re done with comments for a cell and want to remove them, right-click over the cell and select
Clear comments.
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