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Sut i adnabod a dewis yr holl gelloedd unedig yn Excel?

Ydych chi'n gwybod sut i ddod o hyd i'r holl gelloedd unedig a'u dewis yn Excel? Dyma dair ffordd anodd cŵl o nodi a dewis pob cell unedig mewn detholiad neu ystod yn Excel yn gyflym.

doc dewis celloedd unedig 4

Nodi a dewis pob cell gyfun â Dod o hyd i orchymyn

Dewiswch a chyfrifwch yr holl gelloedd unedig yn gyflym gyda Kutools ar gyfer Excel

Nodi'r holl gelloedd unedig â chod VBA


Nodi a dewis pob cell gyfun â Dod o hyd i orchymyn

Gallwch chi nodi a dewis yr holl gelloedd unedig mewn taflen waith weithredol erbyn Dod o hyd i gorchymyn gyda'r camau canlynol:

1. Cliciwch y Hafan > Dod o Hyd i a Dewis > Dod o hyd i i agor y Dod o hyd ac yn ei le blwch deialog. Gallwch hefyd agor y Dod o hyd ac yn ei le blwch deialog gyda phwyso'r Ctrl + F allweddi.

2. Cliciwch y fformat botwm yn y blwch deialog, (Os na allwch ddarganfod y fformat botwm, cliciwch y Dewisiadau botwm i ehangu'r ymgom.) gweler y screenshot:

doc dewis celloedd unedig 1

3. Yn y popping up Dewch o Hyd i Fformat blwch deialog, gwiriwch y Uno Celloedd opsiwn yn y Rheoli testun adran dan Aliniad tab, a chlicio OK.

doc dewis celloedd unedig 2

4. Nawr rydych chi'n mynd yn ôl i'r Dod o hyd ac yn ei le blwch deialog, cliciwch Dewch o Hyd i Bawb botwm. Rhestrir yr holl gelloedd unedig ar waelod y blwch deialog hwn. Dewiswch yr holl ganlyniadau darganfod gyda dal y Symud allweddol.

Nawr mae'r holl gelloedd unedig ar ddalen weithredol yn cael eu dewis pan fyddwch chi'n dewis yr holl ganlyniadau sy'n dod o hyd. Gweler y screenshot:

doc dewis celloedd unedig 3

Awgrym: Os ydych chi eisiau adnabod, dod o hyd i, a dewis celloedd unedig mewn detholiad yn unig, mae angen i chi ddewis yr ystod yn gyntaf.


Dewiswch a chyfrwch yr holl gelloedd unedig gyda Kutools ar gyfer Excel

Kutools ar gyfer Excel's Dewiswch Gelloedd Cyfun bydd offeryn yn eich helpu i adnabod, dod o hyd i a dewis pob cell gyfun mewn detholiad gyda dim ond un clic.

Kutools ar gyfer Excel : gyda mwy na 300 o ychwanegiadau Excel defnyddiol, am ddim i geisio heb unrhyw gyfyngiad mewn 30 diwrnod. 

Ar ôl gosod Kutools ar gyfer Excel, gwnewch fel a ganlyn :( Am ddim Lawrlwythwch Kutools ar gyfer Excel Nawr! )

1. Dewiswch yr ystod ddata rydych chi am ddewis y celloedd unedig.

2. Cliciwch Kutools > dewiswch > Dewiswch Gelloedd Cyfun, gweler y screenshot:

3. Ac mae'r holl gelloedd unedig yn y detholiad wedi'u dewis ar unwaith, ac mae nifer y celloedd unedig yn cael eu cyfrif hefyd, gweler y screenshot:

doc dewis celloedd unedig 7

Tip: I ddefnyddio'r nodwedd hon, dylech osod Kutools ar gyfer Excel yn gyntaf, os gwelwch yn dda cliciwch i lawrlwytho a chael treial am ddim 30 diwrnod yn awr.

Nodi'r holl gelloedd unedig â chod VBA

VBA 1: Nodi ac amlygu'r holl gelloedd unedig

1. Daliwch i lawr y ALT + F11 allweddi, ac mae'n agor y Microsoft Visual Basic ar gyfer Ceisiadau ffenestr.

2. Cliciwch Mewnosod > Modiwlau, a gludwch y macro canlynol yn y Modiwlau Ffenestr.

Sub FindMergedcells()
'updateby Extendoffice
Dim x As Range
For Each x In ActiveSheet.UsedRange
If x.MergeCells Then
x.Interior.ColorIndex = 8
End If
Next
End Sub

3. Gwasgwch y F5 allwedd i redeg y macro hwn. Mae'r holl gelloedd unedig yn y daflen waith weithredol yn cael eu nodi a'u hamlygu, gweler y screenshot:

doc dewis celloedd unedig 4

VBA 2: Nodi a rhestru'r holl gelloedd unedig

1. Daliwch i lawr y ALT + F11 allweddi, ac mae'n agor y Microsoft Visual Basic ar gyfer Ceisiadau ffenestr.

2. Cliciwch MewnosodModiwlau, a gludwch y macro canlynol yn y Modiwlau Ffenestr.

Sub ListMergedcells()
'updateby Extendoffice
Dim x As Range
Dim sMsg As String
sMsg = ""
For Each x In ActiveSheet.UsedRange
If x.MergeCells Then
If sMsg = "" Then
sMsg = "Merged cells:" & vbCr
End If
sMsg = sMsg & Replace(x.Address, "$", "") & vbCr
End If
Next
If sMsg = "" Then
sMsg = "No merged cells."
End If
MsgBox sMsg
End Sub

3. Gwasgwch y F5 yn allweddol i redeg y macro hwn, mae'r holl gelloedd unedig wedi'u rhestru mewn blwch deialog popio i fyny. Gweler y screenshot:

doc dewis celloedd unedig 5

Comments (12)
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Is it possible to identify the first and the last column number of the merged range in vba?
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I require code to list merged ranges in a worksheet where the merged ranges are individually entered in cells starting at "A1" thus a3:c3 b2:b7 etc...........
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well done You are a star... Thanks :-)
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Very Nice thanks a lot
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Actually I just about went mental trying to fix this in a spreadsheet. In desperation I selected all the cells (control A) clicked "merge and centre" and presto! it was fixed.
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Probably obvious, but: In my last comment I should have made it clear you need to "select" each column, in turn, before scanning visually. Though really you only need to scan certain columns, I think: To the best of my knowledge, it's only cells containing text that will occasionally annex an adjoining cell, and numeric-only columns can be trusted not to do so. Even with text columns, you should be OK just checking every other column, because if any cell in the selected column has been involved in an annexation (to the right or from the left), that will show up in a visual scan of the selected column. I have never seen annexations occurring vertically, only horizontally. But if such a thing happened (a vertical annexation), you could try the same technique going row by row instead of column by column. The procedure is tedious, definitely. A royal pain, in fact. But if you have to sort your data, and Microsoft refuses to fix their bug, it's the only recourse I know of. Nowadays I try to remember to put a space character into each cell of the area I expect to use, prior to entering any other data, thus ensuring no annexations will occur.
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thank u this help me to find merged cell in my excel
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... so in the spreadsheet you spoke of, which was not set up with those protective space characters, my approach would be to visually scan each column which lies just to the right of any text column; and immediately after identifying & unmerging each occurrence, I would put a space character in the empty cell so the merging will not recur. Probably there's a VBA or other coding means to accomplish this much more efficiently. Anyone???
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Actually I think this can be avoided entirely, if you remember to do so before entering data into any text column. In my experience the only time cells are clandestinely merged is when an empty cell is to the right of a text cell, where normally the display of the text would be extended to take advantage of the otherwise unused display space provided by the empty cell. Therefore, when initially setting up your spreadsheet, before entering any data, you can fill every "susceptible" cell with a single space—as many rows down as you expect to have data to fill. That space will be honored like any other text, and the cell to the left will not annex it.
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If your spreadsheet is small (or you are desperate enough), the best way I've found is to select one column at a time and scroll all the way down to the bottom. Any merged cells will be obvious, because the entire merged cell is highlighted. You can then fix each one, one by one. But you risk wasting a lot of time doing this, since Excel continues to merge cells "behind your back" whenever it feels like doing so.* Therefore, cells you have just unmerged (or others which hadn't been merged before) may become merged while you believe you are finishing the unmerging process. I tried to find a way to completely disable the merging of cells but haven't found it. Better, of course, would be some way to keep Excel from engaging in this psychopathic behavior! *Yesterday, desperate, I did try to unmerge cells in a not-so-large spreadsheet (22 columns and fewer than 1,000 rows). Each time I thought I had finished and tried to sort, I got that same message. So then I tried another way to identify where the merged cells were—selecting a screenful of rows at a time and trying the sort on just those rows. Each time I got the message, I would try half the screenful at a time (etc.) until I identified the row(s) with merged cells. By going through the entire spreadsheet until each screenful had been successfully sorted, I figured the entire sort should work. But, NOT. Excel had been gleefully merging cells I had just unmerged. Please, someone, post a solution!
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