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In this Microsoft Office 2016 PowerPoint tutorial, I demo how to change the format and adjust the look and layout of your numbered and bulleted lists. Bullets are extremely important in Office 365 whether you're using a PC on Windows or an Apple Mac OS. The process will be the same on both, although I'm using Windows 10. I show you how to increase and decrease list levels, change the look of your bullets, change the color of your bullets, and add and delete other important contents.
Hi, Does anyone if it's possible to add / insert a bullet point list in Microsoft Excel? I know how to add a line break inside a cell but I think a list would look much better for my presentation. Repeat for each bullet point, pressing Alt + Enter at the end of each line. Then, press Enter when To enter a solid bullet character in multiple cells in Excel for Windows, select the cells and click in the Excel replaces the formulas in the cells with the concatenated values. Create a Bulleted List Using.
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I think you're going to have to 'fake it' since formatting in Excel is applied at the cell level and cannot go any lower. The easiest way to fake bullet points in Windows is to hold down the ALT key and press 7 on the numeric keypad to insert a bullet character like this:. After prepending each line with a bullet character and a space, you'll have something that looks like: One caveat you'll see here is that you won't be able to have wrapped lines properly indented this way, but I hope that's good enough. Note that copying bulleted text from Word into Excel produces the same result.
Excel knows it cannot use Word's rich-text representation in this case and uses the plaintext representation, which includes fake bullet characters and additional spaces. Although this does not directly answer the question, it does address the motivation. I have disciplined myself to consider using MS Word if all I am doing is structuring information in a table.
I now only use Excel if I am going to use spreadsheet functions (i.e. Numerical calculations or conditional logic). My short answer to that OP is 'use MS Word' because the example on the screen does not indicate any functional use of the spreadsheet. If some sort of additional function is required, try a different way of laying out the information because the use of dot points that relate to some other function implies an inefficient organisation of data and may interfere with a future function or need. In my experience, trying to make things look nice in Excel is too hard (column widths, limited formatting, lack of real line breaks, lack of indents and dots, poor header/footer controls etc.).
Likewise, using Excel for calendaring and timeline planning is simply using the wrong tool for the job and makes one's life harder (long term thinking, not short term thinking).