How can I divide cells into two parts in Excel?











up vote
0
down vote

favorite












For example I want to divide cell B2 into two parts, without inserting any new row or column. Please see the screenshot below:



screenshot of workbook, how lovely










share|improve this question
























  • I want to divide a cell into two or more parts which should also let me select the divided part of the cell.
    – ramji
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:08










  • Hi ramji, welcome to Super User. Thanks for the screenshot to illustrate what you would like, but I don't understand how it shows what you want. Can you make it any clearer?
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:11










  • @bertieb the screenshot shows a cell that has 2 parts. I wonder how you achieved that though as to my knowledge that is not possible. Did you draw that line yourself perhaps?
    – LPChip
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:12










  • @LPChip oh, my mistake- could not see that (bad eyesight), thanks for pointing it out
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:13






  • 3




    I am pretty sure Excel does not have a unit smaller than a single cell. You could achieve this by merging B&C for all rows except row 2. How about explaining why you want this, there may be alternative approaches.
    – Paul
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:14















up vote
0
down vote

favorite












For example I want to divide cell B2 into two parts, without inserting any new row or column. Please see the screenshot below:



screenshot of workbook, how lovely










share|improve this question
























  • I want to divide a cell into two or more parts which should also let me select the divided part of the cell.
    – ramji
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:08










  • Hi ramji, welcome to Super User. Thanks for the screenshot to illustrate what you would like, but I don't understand how it shows what you want. Can you make it any clearer?
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:11










  • @bertieb the screenshot shows a cell that has 2 parts. I wonder how you achieved that though as to my knowledge that is not possible. Did you draw that line yourself perhaps?
    – LPChip
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:12










  • @LPChip oh, my mistake- could not see that (bad eyesight), thanks for pointing it out
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:13






  • 3




    I am pretty sure Excel does not have a unit smaller than a single cell. You could achieve this by merging B&C for all rows except row 2. How about explaining why you want this, there may be alternative approaches.
    – Paul
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:14













up vote
0
down vote

favorite









up vote
0
down vote

favorite











For example I want to divide cell B2 into two parts, without inserting any new row or column. Please see the screenshot below:



screenshot of workbook, how lovely










share|improve this question















For example I want to divide cell B2 into two parts, without inserting any new row or column. Please see the screenshot below:



screenshot of workbook, how lovely







microsoft-excel-2010 worksheet-function vba






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Sep 23 '15 at 9:10









bertieb

5,537112342




5,537112342










asked Sep 23 '15 at 9:06









ramji

46127




46127












  • I want to divide a cell into two or more parts which should also let me select the divided part of the cell.
    – ramji
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:08










  • Hi ramji, welcome to Super User. Thanks for the screenshot to illustrate what you would like, but I don't understand how it shows what you want. Can you make it any clearer?
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:11










  • @bertieb the screenshot shows a cell that has 2 parts. I wonder how you achieved that though as to my knowledge that is not possible. Did you draw that line yourself perhaps?
    – LPChip
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:12










  • @LPChip oh, my mistake- could not see that (bad eyesight), thanks for pointing it out
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:13






  • 3




    I am pretty sure Excel does not have a unit smaller than a single cell. You could achieve this by merging B&C for all rows except row 2. How about explaining why you want this, there may be alternative approaches.
    – Paul
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:14


















  • I want to divide a cell into two or more parts which should also let me select the divided part of the cell.
    – ramji
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:08










  • Hi ramji, welcome to Super User. Thanks for the screenshot to illustrate what you would like, but I don't understand how it shows what you want. Can you make it any clearer?
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:11










  • @bertieb the screenshot shows a cell that has 2 parts. I wonder how you achieved that though as to my knowledge that is not possible. Did you draw that line yourself perhaps?
    – LPChip
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:12










  • @LPChip oh, my mistake- could not see that (bad eyesight), thanks for pointing it out
    – bertieb
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:13






  • 3




    I am pretty sure Excel does not have a unit smaller than a single cell. You could achieve this by merging B&C for all rows except row 2. How about explaining why you want this, there may be alternative approaches.
    – Paul
    Sep 23 '15 at 9:14
















I want to divide a cell into two or more parts which should also let me select the divided part of the cell.
– ramji
Sep 23 '15 at 9:08




I want to divide a cell into two or more parts which should also let me select the divided part of the cell.
– ramji
Sep 23 '15 at 9:08












Hi ramji, welcome to Super User. Thanks for the screenshot to illustrate what you would like, but I don't understand how it shows what you want. Can you make it any clearer?
– bertieb
Sep 23 '15 at 9:11




Hi ramji, welcome to Super User. Thanks for the screenshot to illustrate what you would like, but I don't understand how it shows what you want. Can you make it any clearer?
– bertieb
Sep 23 '15 at 9:11












@bertieb the screenshot shows a cell that has 2 parts. I wonder how you achieved that though as to my knowledge that is not possible. Did you draw that line yourself perhaps?
– LPChip
Sep 23 '15 at 9:12




@bertieb the screenshot shows a cell that has 2 parts. I wonder how you achieved that though as to my knowledge that is not possible. Did you draw that line yourself perhaps?
– LPChip
Sep 23 '15 at 9:12












@LPChip oh, my mistake- could not see that (bad eyesight), thanks for pointing it out
– bertieb
Sep 23 '15 at 9:13




@LPChip oh, my mistake- could not see that (bad eyesight), thanks for pointing it out
– bertieb
Sep 23 '15 at 9:13




3




3




I am pretty sure Excel does not have a unit smaller than a single cell. You could achieve this by merging B&C for all rows except row 2. How about explaining why you want this, there may be alternative approaches.
– Paul
Sep 23 '15 at 9:14




I am pretty sure Excel does not have a unit smaller than a single cell. You could achieve this by merging B&C for all rows except row 2. How about explaining why you want this, there may be alternative approaches.
– Paul
Sep 23 '15 at 9:14










1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes

















up vote
0
down vote













It is not possible to split an Excel cell into smaller parts (rows, columns).



This concept exists in Word tables or in html, but not in Excel.



When designing a spreadsheet you need to start from the smallest unit in a table, which is a cell. As discussed in the comments to your question, you can merge cells to span several rows or several columns.



Merged cells introduce problems with aspects of data selection, though, so use them with caution. Instead of merging cells across several columns, it is often better to use the cell alignment "Center across selection".






share|improve this answer





















  • This does not answer the question nor it is quality answer. Of course you can split cells into smaller parts.
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 17:55






  • 1




    @Baron, pray please tell me how you split a cell in Excel into smaller parts. Post that as an answer and you'll have my upvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 20:40












  • The page explains how to merge split cells, computerhope.com/issues/ch000874.htm
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:21










  • @Baron And there you have it. They show how to merge cells. They show how to split merged cells back into single cells. But there is NO WAY to split a single cell that is not part of a merged cell. Please read the question and understand the problem before shooting down a correct answer. I suggest you take back your downvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:49












  • @Baron Nothing more to say? I'm eagerly awaiting your response. Prove your claim that single cells can be split or take back your downvote. I challenge you.
    – teylyn
    Sep 2 '16 at 23:16











Your Answer








StackExchange.ready(function() {
var channelOptions = {
tags: "".split(" "),
id: "3"
};
initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function() {
// Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled) {
StackExchange.using("snippets", function() {
createEditor();
});
}
else {
createEditor();
}
});

function createEditor() {
StackExchange.prepareEditor({
heartbeatType: 'answer',
convertImagesToLinks: true,
noModals: true,
showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
reputationToPostImages: 10,
bindNavPrevention: true,
postfix: "",
imageUploader: {
brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
allowUrls: true
},
onDemand: true,
discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
});


}
});














draft saved

draft discarded


















StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f977001%2fhow-can-i-divide-cells-into-two-parts-in-excel%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown

























1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
0
down vote













It is not possible to split an Excel cell into smaller parts (rows, columns).



This concept exists in Word tables or in html, but not in Excel.



When designing a spreadsheet you need to start from the smallest unit in a table, which is a cell. As discussed in the comments to your question, you can merge cells to span several rows or several columns.



Merged cells introduce problems with aspects of data selection, though, so use them with caution. Instead of merging cells across several columns, it is often better to use the cell alignment "Center across selection".






share|improve this answer





















  • This does not answer the question nor it is quality answer. Of course you can split cells into smaller parts.
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 17:55






  • 1




    @Baron, pray please tell me how you split a cell in Excel into smaller parts. Post that as an answer and you'll have my upvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 20:40












  • The page explains how to merge split cells, computerhope.com/issues/ch000874.htm
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:21










  • @Baron And there you have it. They show how to merge cells. They show how to split merged cells back into single cells. But there is NO WAY to split a single cell that is not part of a merged cell. Please read the question and understand the problem before shooting down a correct answer. I suggest you take back your downvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:49












  • @Baron Nothing more to say? I'm eagerly awaiting your response. Prove your claim that single cells can be split or take back your downvote. I challenge you.
    – teylyn
    Sep 2 '16 at 23:16















up vote
0
down vote













It is not possible to split an Excel cell into smaller parts (rows, columns).



This concept exists in Word tables or in html, but not in Excel.



When designing a spreadsheet you need to start from the smallest unit in a table, which is a cell. As discussed in the comments to your question, you can merge cells to span several rows or several columns.



Merged cells introduce problems with aspects of data selection, though, so use them with caution. Instead of merging cells across several columns, it is often better to use the cell alignment "Center across selection".






share|improve this answer





















  • This does not answer the question nor it is quality answer. Of course you can split cells into smaller parts.
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 17:55






  • 1




    @Baron, pray please tell me how you split a cell in Excel into smaller parts. Post that as an answer and you'll have my upvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 20:40












  • The page explains how to merge split cells, computerhope.com/issues/ch000874.htm
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:21










  • @Baron And there you have it. They show how to merge cells. They show how to split merged cells back into single cells. But there is NO WAY to split a single cell that is not part of a merged cell. Please read the question and understand the problem before shooting down a correct answer. I suggest you take back your downvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:49












  • @Baron Nothing more to say? I'm eagerly awaiting your response. Prove your claim that single cells can be split or take back your downvote. I challenge you.
    – teylyn
    Sep 2 '16 at 23:16













up vote
0
down vote










up vote
0
down vote









It is not possible to split an Excel cell into smaller parts (rows, columns).



This concept exists in Word tables or in html, but not in Excel.



When designing a spreadsheet you need to start from the smallest unit in a table, which is a cell. As discussed in the comments to your question, you can merge cells to span several rows or several columns.



Merged cells introduce problems with aspects of data selection, though, so use them with caution. Instead of merging cells across several columns, it is often better to use the cell alignment "Center across selection".






share|improve this answer












It is not possible to split an Excel cell into smaller parts (rows, columns).



This concept exists in Word tables or in html, but not in Excel.



When designing a spreadsheet you need to start from the smallest unit in a table, which is a cell. As discussed in the comments to your question, you can merge cells to span several rows or several columns.



Merged cells introduce problems with aspects of data selection, though, so use them with caution. Instead of merging cells across several columns, it is often better to use the cell alignment "Center across selection".







share|improve this answer












share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer










answered Sep 23 '15 at 11:09









teylyn

16.6k22438




16.6k22438












  • This does not answer the question nor it is quality answer. Of course you can split cells into smaller parts.
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 17:55






  • 1




    @Baron, pray please tell me how you split a cell in Excel into smaller parts. Post that as an answer and you'll have my upvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 20:40












  • The page explains how to merge split cells, computerhope.com/issues/ch000874.htm
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:21










  • @Baron And there you have it. They show how to merge cells. They show how to split merged cells back into single cells. But there is NO WAY to split a single cell that is not part of a merged cell. Please read the question and understand the problem before shooting down a correct answer. I suggest you take back your downvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:49












  • @Baron Nothing more to say? I'm eagerly awaiting your response. Prove your claim that single cells can be split or take back your downvote. I challenge you.
    – teylyn
    Sep 2 '16 at 23:16


















  • This does not answer the question nor it is quality answer. Of course you can split cells into smaller parts.
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 17:55






  • 1




    @Baron, pray please tell me how you split a cell in Excel into smaller parts. Post that as an answer and you'll have my upvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 20:40












  • The page explains how to merge split cells, computerhope.com/issues/ch000874.htm
    – amrx
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:21










  • @Baron And there you have it. They show how to merge cells. They show how to split merged cells back into single cells. But there is NO WAY to split a single cell that is not part of a merged cell. Please read the question and understand the problem before shooting down a correct answer. I suggest you take back your downvote.
    – teylyn
    Aug 30 '16 at 21:49












  • @Baron Nothing more to say? I'm eagerly awaiting your response. Prove your claim that single cells can be split or take back your downvote. I challenge you.
    – teylyn
    Sep 2 '16 at 23:16
















This does not answer the question nor it is quality answer. Of course you can split cells into smaller parts.
– amrx
Aug 30 '16 at 17:55




This does not answer the question nor it is quality answer. Of course you can split cells into smaller parts.
– amrx
Aug 30 '16 at 17:55




1




1




@Baron, pray please tell me how you split a cell in Excel into smaller parts. Post that as an answer and you'll have my upvote.
– teylyn
Aug 30 '16 at 20:40






@Baron, pray please tell me how you split a cell in Excel into smaller parts. Post that as an answer and you'll have my upvote.
– teylyn
Aug 30 '16 at 20:40














The page explains how to merge split cells, computerhope.com/issues/ch000874.htm
– amrx
Aug 30 '16 at 21:21




The page explains how to merge split cells, computerhope.com/issues/ch000874.htm
– amrx
Aug 30 '16 at 21:21












@Baron And there you have it. They show how to merge cells. They show how to split merged cells back into single cells. But there is NO WAY to split a single cell that is not part of a merged cell. Please read the question and understand the problem before shooting down a correct answer. I suggest you take back your downvote.
– teylyn
Aug 30 '16 at 21:49






@Baron And there you have it. They show how to merge cells. They show how to split merged cells back into single cells. But there is NO WAY to split a single cell that is not part of a merged cell. Please read the question and understand the problem before shooting down a correct answer. I suggest you take back your downvote.
– teylyn
Aug 30 '16 at 21:49














@Baron Nothing more to say? I'm eagerly awaiting your response. Prove your claim that single cells can be split or take back your downvote. I challenge you.
– teylyn
Sep 2 '16 at 23:16




@Baron Nothing more to say? I'm eagerly awaiting your response. Prove your claim that single cells can be split or take back your downvote. I challenge you.
– teylyn
Sep 2 '16 at 23:16


















draft saved

draft discarded




















































Thanks for contributing an answer to Super User!


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.





Some of your past answers have not been well-received, and you're in danger of being blocked from answering.


Please pay close attention to the following guidance:


  • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

But avoid



  • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

  • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.


To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




draft saved


draft discarded














StackExchange.ready(
function () {
StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2fsuperuser.com%2fquestions%2f977001%2fhow-can-i-divide-cells-into-two-parts-in-excel%23new-answer', 'question_page');
}
);

Post as a guest















Required, but never shown





















































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown

































Required, but never shown














Required, but never shown












Required, but never shown







Required, but never shown







Popular posts from this blog

Probability when a professor distributes a quiz and homework assignment to a class of n students.

Aardman Animations

Are they similar matrix