![]() One way around the problem is to use a macro to set the row height to the desired height. Doing so, however, apparently has no affect-AutoFit seems to completely ignore merged cells in doing its magic. At first blush you may think that you can use the AutoFit feature (Format | Rows | AutoFit) to adjust the height of the row in which the merged cell is located. If you subsequently merge that cell with an adjacent cell, even if the adjacent cell has text wrapping turned on, then the resulting merged cell's row height is not adjusted so that all the text is visible.Įxactly why Excel does this is unclear, but there is no intrinsic way around it-Excel just does it. ![]() He points out that if a cell is set with text wrapping turned on, that Excel automatically adjusts the row height for the cell so that all the wrapped text is visible. Ernie asked if there was a way for Excel to automatically adjust the row height in cells that are merged.
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