
Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > Printing > Non-Printing Controls
Summary: Excel allows you to create all sorts of form-based controls in a worksheet. The problem is, the controls can mess up the appearance of your printout. This tip explains how you can suppress the printing of forms controls to get just the appearance you need. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)
Excel allows you to place some special controls in your worksheet which can make it easier to input information. For instance, you can add a drop-down control that allows your user to select data from a given set that you have defined.
While these controls are handy, they can be distracting when it comes time to print your worksheet. They will print, but they take away from the other data you want people to focus upon in the printout.
As a solution, many people simply define print areas that don't include the cells over which the controls appear. For example, if the controls are placed over some cells in column B, you can define a print area that begins with column C. (Remember that the selections in a control can be assigned to any cell in the worksheet through the use of the Linked Cell property of the control. Thus, a change in the control results in a change in some value in a cell in the worksheet. This means that the appearance of the control is independent from the appearance of the data selected in the control.)
Another solution is to simply turn off the printing of the control. For instance, you could have the control appear over the top of cell C3, and the value of C3 is linked to the control. You can then follow these steps to turn off printing of the control:
If you prefer to work directly with the control's properties, you can follow these steps instead:
Tip #3081 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 2000 2002 2003
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