Displaying a Hidden First Column
Excel makes it easy
to hide and unhide columns. What isn't so easy is displaying a hidden column if
that column is the left-most column in the worksheet. For instance, if you hide
column A, Excel will dutifully follow out your instructions. If you later want
to unhide column A, the solution isn't so obvious.
To unhide the
left-most columns of a worksheet when they are hidden, follow these steps:
1.
Choose Go To from the Edit menu, or press F5. Excel
displays the Go To dialog box. (See Figure 1.)
Figure 1. The Go To dialog
box.
1.
In the Reference field at the bottom of the dialog box, enter A1.
2.
Click on OK. Cell A1 is now selected, even though you cannot see
it on the screen.
3.
Choose Column from the Format menu, then choose Unhide.
Another way to
display the first column is to click on the header for column B, and then drag
the mouse to the left. If you release the mouse button when the pointer is over
the gray block that marks the intersection of the row and column headers (the
blank gray block just above the row headers), then column B and everything to
its left, including the hidden column A, are selected. You can then choose
Column from the Format menu and then choose Unhide.
A third method is
even niftier, provided you have a good eye and a steady mouse pointer. If you
move your mouse pointer into the column header area, and then slowly move it to
the left, you notice that it turns into a double-headed arrow with a blank spot
in the middle as you position the pointer over the small area immediately to
the left of the column B header. This double-headed arrow is a bit difficult to
describe; it looks most closely like the double-headed arrow that appears when
you position the pointer over the dividing line between column headers. It is
different, however, because instead of a black line dividing the double arrows,
there are two black lines with a gap between them.
When your mouse
pointer changes to this special double-headed arrow, all you have to do is
right-click and choose Unhide. Your previously missing column A magically
reappears.
