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Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Graphics > Drawing Simple Objects

Drawing Simple Objects

Summary: Want to draw a few simple shapes or lines on your worksheet? Here’s how to do it. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, Excel 2003, and Excel 2007.)

Excel includes a feature that allows you to add graphic objects to your worksheets. For the sake of this tip, simple objects include lines, arrows, rectangles (or squares), and ovals (or circles). These are considered simple because it only takes three quick steps to draw each of them.

Exactly how you draw the objects depends on the version of Excel you are using. If you are using a version prior to Excel 2007, then you use the Drawing toolbar. If you are using Excel 2007, then you use the Insert tab of the ribbon.

Drawing objects that involve lines (such as lines and arrows) requires only that you perform a few steps:

  1. If you are using the Drawing toolbar, select either the Line or Arrow tool by clicking on it with the mouse. (You may need to click the AutoShapes menu first.) If you are using Excel 2007, click the Shapes tool in the Illustrations group, and then select the line or arrow that you want to draw.
  2. Move the mouse to the starting point for the line or arrow and click and hold the mouse button.
  3. Move the mouse to the other end of the line and release the mouse button.

As you move the mouse in Step 2, notice that Excel displays a line that shows the approximate size, angle, and position of the line or arrow you are creating. When you release the mouse button (Step 3), the line or arrow is redrawn in its final position and appearance. If you are drawing an arrow, the arrowhead appears at the end of the line where you ended your drawing (Step 3).

As with lines, the other simple objects only require two points to define them. Each of them, regardless of the final shape, is defined by a rectangle. (Yes, even ellipses and circles are defined by a rectangle—one that contains the entire shape.) You only need to do the following:

  1. If you are using the Drawing toolbar, select the drawing tool by clicking on it with the mouse. (You may need to click the AutoShapes menu first.) If you are using Excel 2007, click the Shapes tool in the Illustrations group, and then select the shape you want to draw.
  2. Move the mouse to one corner of the rectangle that will define the boundary of the shape, typically the upper-left corner, and click and hold the mouse button.
  3. Drag the mouse to the opposite rectangle corner (the lower-right) and release the mouse button.

Notice that as you perform Step 2, the shape appears on the screen and is dynamically sized as long as you continue to hold down the mouse button and move the mouse. When you release the button, the object is drawn in its final size and shape.

If you want to create a square or a circle, both of which are special forms of rectangles and ovals, Excel makes it easy. All you need to do is hold down the Shift key as you drag the mouse to the second point. Thus, you click the mouse, hold down Shift as you move the mouse pointer, and then release the mouse button.

Tip #2520 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003 | 2007


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