So, certainly one way to get a Print Preview is to go the File tab and choose Print, and we get an idea of what our worksheet's likely to look like. Escape from here to go back into Excel. Oct 19, 2018 - Page Up. Scroll one page down in print preview. Preview a sheet or spreadsheet. Open Numbers Help.
NOTE: Changing system function key preferences affects how the function keys work for your Mac, not just Excel. After changing this setting, you can still perform the special features printed on a function key.
Just press the FN key. For example, to use the F12 key to change your volume, you would press FN+F12. If a function key doesn't work as you expect it to, press the FN key in addition to the function key. If you don't want to press the FN key each time, you can change your Apple system preferences: Change function key preferences with the mouse. On the Apple menu, press System Preferences. Select Keyboard.
![Mac Keyboard Shortcut For Print Preview Excel Mac Keyboard Shortcut For Print Preview Excel](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125465233/514654546.png)
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On the Keyboard tab, select the check box for Use all F1, F2, etc. Keys as standard function keys.
By To see a preview of what your printed page will look like in Mac OS X Lion, choose Open PDF in Preview from the PDF pop-up menu in the bottom-left corner of the expanded Print sheet. When you do so in Lion, you see the page or pages that you’re about to print displayed by the Preview application. If you have any doubt about the way a document will look when you print it, check out Preview first.
When you’re happy with the document preview, just choose File→Print, press Command+P, or click the Print button at the bottom of the Preview window. Or click the Cancel button to return to your application and make changes to the document.
Preview works with the Preview application that Apple includes with Mac OS X. With the Preview feature, you can do cool things like these:.
See all the pages in your document the way they will be printed, one by one. Zoom in or out to get a different perspective on what you’re about to send to the printer.
Rotate the picture 90 degrees to the left or right. Spot errors before you commit to printing something. A little up-front inspection can save you a lot of paper, ink (or toner), and frustration.
Check out the Preview program’s View menu, where you’ll find (among other things), four useful views: Content Only, Thumbnails, Table of Contents, and Contact Sheet, as well as the zoom commands and more. While you’re checking out menus, you won’t want to miss the Tools menu, which lets you rotate pages, move forward or backward (through multipage documents); select the Move, Text, or Select tool (for which the useful keyboard shortcuts are Command+1, 2, and 3, respectively); and invoke the awesome new (in OS X Lion) Magnifier. The Magnifier tool is so cool (and new) that it has a rare single-key keyboard shortcut. That key is the ` (the accent, which shares a key with the tilde); press it to show or hide the Magnifier. One last thing: Many of the tools and commands mentioned above are also available in the toolbar.
Add or delete buttons from the toolbar by choosing View→Customize Toolbar.