Outlook’s Calendar compresses Saturday and Sunday into one day. The square is subdivided into two days, but you’re still looking at two days in the space allotted to one day, for the rest of the week. Most of us won’t mind, but if you do, how can you force Outlook to give equal space to Saturday and Sunday?

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Office challenge: How can you display Saturday and Sunday as individual days in Outlook’s calendar?
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Outlook’s Calendar compresses Saturday and Sunday into one day. The square is subdivided into two days, but you’re still looking at two days in the space allotted to one day, for the rest of the week.

More here:
Office challenge: How can you display Saturday and Sunday as individual days in Outlook’s calendar?
Tags:
calendar,
correct,
current,
great-challenge,
list-the-anchor,
looking-at-two,
outlook,
quickest,
saturday,
space,
still-looking,
sunday,
the-quickest
Most of the time, you probably prefer to view and work in a document as it appears printed. That setup usually works well until you’re working with a wide document or the screen display resolution is low. In either case, the text extends past the right edge, as shown below, and the only way you can view or edit the out-of-sight text is to scroll back and forth—it’s tedious at best and can lead to errors because it’s a bit confusing.

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Quickly viewing Word text that extends past the right edge of a document
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current,
document-window,
normal-options,
office,
setting,
time,
wrapped-within,
wraptowindow
Most of the time, you probably prefer to view and work in a document as it appears printed. That setup usually works well until you’re working with a wide document or the screen display resolution is low.

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Quickly viewing Word text that extends past the right edge of a document
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button,
case,
choose-options,
current,
document-window,
normal-options,
time,
tools
This past week, I started mapping out new flowerbeds on graph paper. Now, graph paper’s cheap, but making changes takes time and sometimes you just have to start over. Unfortunately, I don’t have specialized software aimed at garden design, so I thought about what I do have–I have Excel! With just a little work, I turned an Excel sheet into a modifiable piece of graph paper.

The rest is here:
Turn an Excel sheet into graph paper
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both-the-height,
cells,
current,
entire,
excel,
height,
microsoft excel,
mind,
properties,
rectangle
This past week, I started mapping out new flowerbeds on graph paper. Now, graph paper’s cheap, but making changes takes time and sometimes you just have to start over

Read the original post:
Turn an Excel sheet into graph paper
Tags:
cells,
current,
drawing,
excel,
microsoft excel,
mind,
properties,
rectangle,
sheet