Easily rearrange rows and columns by dragging from the row number
If you want to reorder a row, you can do it in
one step by first clicking on the row number to highlight the row, then
clicking and dragging from
the row number to easily slot it wherever you want it.

Google owns the top-level domain “.new,” so
this also works for docs.new, slides.new, cal.new, etc. They started letting
other websites use the domain in 2019; so Spotify has playlist.new, Medium has story.new, etc.
This is as easy as it sounds — if you want your
column width to automatically resize to the shortest or longest entry, just
double click in between the column headers. This also works in Excel.

I pull data about The
Verge from a lot of different sources, which all
have their own fonts and styling, so this trick comes in handy. By using Command
+ Shift + v instead of Command + v on Mac or Ctrl + Shift + v instead of Ctrl + v on PC, you can strip the old font and font sizes as you
paste and insert clear text.

You can also paste plain values by double
clicking into a cell before you paste, but that’s a little more cumbersome. To
clear formatting from multiple cells at once, first highlight them and then use Command
+ \ on Mac or Ctrl
+ \ on PC. There are a ton more keyboard shortcuts like this, which Google
catalogs here.
Add multiple hyperlinks to one cell
This one’s more of a PSA — for a long time, you
could only hyperlink entire cells. My colleague Jay Peters recently
discovered that this is no longer the case; you can now add as
many links as your heart desires. Just click into the cell and highlight the
word or phrase you want to hyperlink before adding your links.




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