Excel 2016 Get To The Backstage Area

  1. Excel 2016 Get To The Backstage Area
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Lesson 12: Page Layout and Printing

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  • The areas of the Backstage View - Excel 2016 Similar to the behind the scenes activity of a stage play, the Backstage view in Excel contain all the tools needed to create, manage and share an Excel workbook. To access the wonderful world of the Excel 2016 Backstage view: 1. In an open Excel workbook, click on the File tab: 2.
  • The Backstage View. Cell address or cell reference. Current cell with a green border around it. A feature of Microsoft Office 2016 from which you access file. The intersection of a column and a row. The location of a cell in a worksheet as identified by its col.

Excel 2016 and higher. When you click on File in Excel 2016 and higher you can see a different amount of buttons and tabs in Backstage View. The first image is from Excel up to date in Aug-2019 and the second from the first few versions of Excel 2016. Note: the names and idMso's in blue in the table are the tabs. After a Excel 2016 update.

Introduction

There may be times when you want to print a workbook to view and share your data offline. Once you've chosen your page layout settings, it's easy to preview and print a workbook from Excel using the Print pane.

Optional: Download our practice workbook.

Watch the video below to learn more about page layout and printing.

To access the Print pane:

  1. Select the File tab. Backstage view will appear.
  2. Select Print. The Print pane will appear.

Click the buttons in the interactive below to learn more about using the Print pane.

To print a workbook:

  1. Navigate to the Print pane, then select the desired printer.
  2. Enter the number of copies you want to print.
  3. Select any additional settings if needed (see above interactive).
  4. Click Print.

Choosing a print area

Before you print an Excel workbook, it's important to decide exactly what information you want to print. For example, if you have multiple worksheets in your workbook, you will need to decide if you want to print the entireworkbook or only activeworksheets. There may also be times when you want to print only a selection of content from your workbook.

To print active sheets:

Excel 2016 Get To The Backstage Area

Worksheets are considered active when selected.

Excel 2016 get to the backstage areas
  1. Select the worksheet you want to print. To print multipleworksheets, click the first worksheet, hold the Ctrl key on your keyboard, then click any other worksheets you want to select.
  2. Navigate to the Print pane.
  3. Select Print Active Sheets from the Print Range drop-down menu.
  4. Click the Print button.

To print the entire workbook:

  1. Navigate to the Print pane.
  2. Select Print Entire Workbook from the Print Range drop-down menu.
  3. Click the Print button.

To print a selection:

In our example, we'll print the records for the top 40 salespeople on the Central worksheet.

  1. Select the cells you want to print.
  2. Navigate to the Print pane.
  3. Select Print Selection from the Print Range drop-down menu.
  4. A preview of your selection will appear in the Preview pane.
  5. Click the Print button to print the selection.

If you prefer, you can also set the print area in advance so you'll be able to visualize which cells will be printed as you work in Excel. Simply select the cells you want to print, click the Page Layout tab, select the Print Area command, then choose Set Print Area. Keep in mind that if you ever need to print the entire workbook, you'll need to clear the print area.

Adjusting content

On occasion, you may need to make small adjustments from the Print pane to fit your workbook content neatly onto a printed page. The Print pane includes several tools to help fit and scale your content, such as scaling and pagemargins.

To change page orientation:

Excel offers two page orientation options: landscape and portrait. Landscape orients the page horizontally, while portrait orients the page vertically. In our example, we'll set the page orientation to landscape.

  1. Navigate to the Print pane.
  2. Select the desired orientation from the Page Orientation drop-down menu. In our example, we'll select Landscape Orientation.
  3. The new page orientation will be displayed in the Preview pane.

To fit content before printing:

If some of your content is being cut off by the printer, you can use scaling to fit your workbook to the page automatically.

  1. Navigate to the Print pane. In our example, we can see in the Preview pane that our content will be cut off when printed.
  2. Select the desired option from the Scaling drop-down menu. In our example, we'll select Fit All Columns on One Page.
  3. The worksheet will be condensed to fit onto a single page.

Keep in mind that worksheets will become more difficult to read as they are scaled down, so you may not want to use this option when printing a worksheet with a lot of information. In our example, we'll change the scaling setting back to No Scaling.

To include Print Titles:

If your worksheet uses titleheadings, it's important to include these headings on each page of your printed worksheet. It would be difficult to read a printed workbook if the title headings appeared only on the first page. The Print Titles command allows you to select specific rows and columns to appear on each page.

  1. Click the Page Layout tab on the Ribbon, then select the Print Titles command.
  2. The Page Setup dialog box will appear. From here, you can choose rows or columns to repeat on each page. In our example, we'll repeat a row first.
  3. Click the Collapse Dialog button next to the Rows to repeat at top: field.
  4. The cursor will become a small selection arrow, and the Page Setup dialog box will be collapsed. Select the row(s) you want to repeat at the top of each printed page. In our example, we'll select row 1.
  5. Row 1 will be added to the Rows to repeat at top: field. Click the Collapse Dialog button again.
  6. The Page Setup dialog box will expand. To repeat a column as well, use the same process shown in steps 4 and 5. In our example, we've selected to repeat row 1 and column A.
  7. When you're satisfied with your selections, click OK.
  8. In our example, row 1 appears at the top of every page, and column A appears at the left of every page.

To adjust page breaks:

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  1. Click the Page Break Preview command to change to Page Break view.
  2. Vertical and horizontal blue dotted lines denote the page breaks. Click and drag one of these lines to adjust that page break.
  3. In our example, we've set the horizontal page break between rows 21 and 22.
  4. In our example, all the pages now show the same number of rows due to the change in the page break.

To modify margins in the Preview pane:

A margin is the space between your content and the edge of the page. Sometimes you may need to adjust the margins to make your data fit more comfortably. You can modify page margins from the Print pane.

  1. Navigate to the Print pane.
  2. Select the desired margin size from the Page Margins drop-down menu. In our example, we'll select Narrow Margins.
  3. The new page margins will be displayed in the Preview pane.

You can adjust the margins manually by clicking the Show Margins button in the lower-right corner, then dragging the margin markers in the Preview pane.

Challenge!

  1. Open our practice workbook.
  2. Click the East Coast tab at the bottom of the workbook.
  3. In the Page Layout tab, use the Print Titles feature to repeat row 1 at the top and column A at the left.
  4. Using the Page Break Preview command, move the break between rows 47 and 48 up so it's between rows 40 and 41.
  5. In Backstage view, open the Print Pane.
  6. In the Print pane, change the orientation to Landscape.
  7. Change the margins to Narrow.
  8. Change the scaling to Fit All Columns on One Page.
  9. When you are finished, your print preview should look like this:

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