Excel 2007 For Dummies
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The Office Clipboard can store multiple cuts and copies from any Office program running under Windows, not just Excel 2007. In Excel, this means that you can continue to paste stuff from the Office Clipboard into a workbook even after finishing a move or copy operation.

Use the following techniques to work with the Office Clipboard in Excel 2007:

  • To open the Office Clipboard in its own task pane to the immediate left of the Worksheet area, click the Dialog Box launcher button in the lower-right corner of the Clipboard group on the Ribbon’s Home tab.

  • To paste an item from the Office Clipboard into the current worksheet, click the item in the Clipboard task pane to paste it at the current position of the cell cursor.

  • You can paste all the items stored in the Office Clipboard into the current worksheet by clicking the Paste All button at the top of the Clipboard task pane.

  • To clear the Office Clipboard of all the current items, click the Clear All button.

  • To delete only a particular item from the Office Clipboard, position the mouse pointer over the item in the Clipboard task pane until its drop-down button appears. Click this drop-down button and then choose Delete from the pop-up menu.

    The Office Clipboard task pane appears on the left side of the Excel Worksheet area.
    The Office Clipboard task pane appears on the left side of the Excel Worksheet area.

You can have the Office Clipboard task pane appear automatically after making two cuts or copies to the Clipboard in an Excel workbook. Just click the Show Office Clipboard Automatically option on the Options button pop-up menu. To be able to open the Office Clipboard task pane in the Excel program window by pressing Ctrl+CC, click Show Office Clipboard When Ctrl+C Pressed Twice on the Options button’s pop-up menu. Note that this option only opens the task pane by pressing Ctrl+CC; you still have to click the Close button on the Office Clipboard to close the task pane.

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About the book author:

Greg Harvey has authored tons of computer books, the most recent being Excel Workbook For Dummies and Roxio Easy Media Creator 8 For Dummies, and the most popular being Excel 2003 For Dummies and Excel 2003 All-In-One Desk Reference For Dummies. He started out training business users on how to use IBM personal computers and their attendant computer software in the rough and tumble days of DOS, WordStar, and Lotus 1-2-3 in the mid-80s of the last century. After working for a number of independent training firms, Greg went on to teach semester-long courses in spreadsheet and database management software at Golden Gate University in San Francisco.
His love of teaching has translated into an equal love of writing. For Dummies books are, of course, his all-time favorites to write because they enable him to write to his favorite audience: the beginner. They also enable him to use humor (a key element to success in the training room) and, most delightful of all, to express an opinion or two about the subject matter at hand.
Greg received his doctorate degree in Humanities in Philosophy and Religion with a concentration in Asian Studies and Comparative Religion last May. Everyone is glad that Greg was finally able to get out of school before he retired.

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