![]() All kinds of special formatting that you can do, you know, you have It's weird Excel does shapes and I never talk about shapes because it's notĪdding numbers up or anything like that, but you can add a shape to excel. ![]() Hand corner to get to the playlist of all of these podcasts. Sam Radakovitz added the eye dropper tip and noted the subtract feature for shapes.Įxcel from MrExcel Podcast, Episode 2055: Merge ShapesĪlmost done podcasting all the tips in this book. Zack Barresse and Echo Swinford pointed out the Merge Shapes option in PowerPoint. Thanks to Glenna Shaw and Oz du Soleil for contributing ideas to this tip. Thanks to Katie Sullivan (a project manager on the Word team!) for contributing this tip. ![]() (The Subtract feature would let you cut a hole in a shape.) Then copy that shape and paste to Excel (or Word). You can Union, Combine, Fragment, Intersect, or Subtract to combine the shapes. On the Drawing Tools Format tab, choose Merge Shapes. Here's a brief plug for PowerPoint: If you need to create a shape in Excel that is a combination of other shapes, create the shapes in PowerPoint. This feature is in Power Point, but you can copy the merged shape back to Excel and use all of the shape formatting tools. ![]() But what if you need to create a triangle joined to a circle? Let me introduce you to Merge Shapes. You can create circles, ovals, dodecahedrons. ![]()
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