Go to the Format Menu and pick Cells. Then pick Alignment. Then go to the Orientation section. From there you can adjust the orientation of a word to whatever you need.
If it is linked then when the data in the spreadsheet is changed, that change will show in the Word document. If it is embedded, then changes in the spreadsheet will not have any effect on the figures in the Word document.
A Word doc with a linked spreadsheet is usually called a 'Compound Document'.
yes
Sure. Why not?
Select the data in the spreadsheet and copy it. Go to the Word document and in the Edit menu pick Paste Special and Paste Link. A link will be established so that when the spreadsheet changes, the data in the word processing document will also change.
It is still an Excel spreadsheet. The workbook does not change, just because it is linked to another document to form a compound document.
Any printed item can be called a document. Usually, related to computer applications, a document referrs to a word processing output, while a spreadsheet referrs to output from a spreadsheet program, like MS Excel.
Is an external excel spreadsheet linked into a word document considered a compoound document in the microsoft enviroment?
If you do a regular copy and paste, then the chart in the Word document will not change if the data in the Excel spreadsheet does. If you want it to always represent the data as it is the Excel document when it is changed, then you need to link the chart in the Word document to the spreadsheet. You can do it using the Paste Link facility.
For example, a spreadsheet object can be brought into a word-processing document. Any time the spreadsheet object is updated in the original spreadsheet software, the object is automatically updated in the destination document.
The spreadsheet does not change. The combination is called a compound document because of definition.
In MS Word, click on the Insert Object button and select an Excel file to insert.