* Dan Lewis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> [070405, 14:04]:
> On Thursday 07 April 2005 11:33 am, Ennio-Sr wrote:
> > Hi all!
> >
> > as my previous post on this item remains unanswered I feel as being
> > [...]
> > Regards,
> > Ennio.
>
> I get the exact same behavior as you do. As to why Calc would put
> the cell to which you have moved in the middle row, perhaps it is to
> provide you with a view of what is in the cells surrounding it. In your
> previous post, you mentioned only being able to see part of list of
> times that began at a particular cell. How long is that list? What cell
> does the list begin in?
> Here is a suggestion. Add the beginning row number of this list to
> the last row number. Divide this sum by 2. Ignore any remainder. Use
> this quotient as the row number to move to. This will place the list on
> the spreadsheet with the middle row of the list in the middle of the
> window. Divide the number of column in the list by 2. The quotient is
> how far over the middle column is from the first column.
> For example, a list begins at C550. There are 8 filled columns in
> each row. The list runs from row 550 to row 577. The math produces a
> middle row: 563 and a column F (4 columns over from column C). Entering
> F563 puts the list in the middle of the screen in both directions.
> This may not be what you want either, but let me know.
>
> Dan
Thanks, Dan, for your suggestion: AAMOF I'd already found a solution.
What I was trying to investigate is why it behaves that way (I'm
migrating from Lotus ...).
Regards,
Ennio.
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