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How to protect cells, columns, and rows from accidental editing
- Open Excel and select a workbook. For the sake of this tutorial, I’m going to use one of Excel’s default templates.
- First we have to unlock the workbook, which is typically locked (as a whole) by default. To do that, press Ctrl + A to select the entire document.
- Right click and choose Format cells.
- Under the Protection tab, uncheck Locked. If it’s not checked by default, you’re ready to go. <uncheck.png>
- Press OK. With your workbook now unlocked, we can set about locking specific areas. For the sake of this tutorial, we’re going to pretend we’re responsible for Column B, C, and D.
- Select the area of the workbook you’d like to protect.
- Right click and select Format cells. Alternatively, you can use the keyboard shortcut Ctrl + 1.
- Check Locked and press OK. In an Excel workbook, nothing is ever really locked until you protect the sheet. We’re going to do that next.
- Under the Review tab (in the Ribbon), choose Protect Sheet.
- Add a password (if desired), and choose what you’d like other users to be able to edit in your protected section. If you’d rather them not touch it at all, uncheck each of the boxes and press OK. Now, if you try clicking in any of the three columns we protected, nothing happens. Just the way we wanted it.
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