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3.7: Printing and Page Layout Features

  • Page ID
    151149
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    Before printing or sharing a Microsoft Excel workbook, it is essential to ensure the layout is clean, readable, and formatted for the intended output. Excel provides several page layout and printing tools that help control how data appears on paper or in PDF format. These tools help prevent common issues such as data getting cut off, excessive white space, or missing labels. By planning the layout before distribution, users can present data professionally, improving clarity and impact.

    Page Layout View: Preview the Printed Page

    Page Layout View offers a visual preview of how the worksheet will appear when printed, including headers, footers, and margins. This view helps users make final adjustments before printing.

    To access Page Layout View:

    • Go to the View tab > select Page Layout.
    • This switches the display to show page breaks, ruler guides, and printable content boundaries.

    This view is especially useful for formatting titles, confirming that charts are positioned correctly, and verifying that the printout will not split important data across pages.

    Page Layout Tab in Excel - Excel Tutorial

    Figure 3.7.1: Excel Page Layout ribbon.

    Set Print Area: Print Only What You Need

    By default, Excel prints the entire worksheet, which may include empty cells or extra columns and rows. To focus the output on specific content, set a defined Print Area.

    To set the print area:

    • Select the range of cells you want to print.
    • Go to Page Layout > Print Area > Set Print Area.

    The defined area can be adjusted or cleared as needed. This is particularly helpful for creating reports or exports from larger data sets where only a portion is relevant to the audience.

    Print Area in Excel (Example) | How to Set Excel Print Area ...

    Figure 3.7.2 Print Area button location

    Page Orientation and Margins

    Choosing the appropriate page orientation and margin settings ensures the worksheet fits neatly on the printed page.

    • Orientation:
      • Go to Page Layout > Orientation to switch between Portrait (vertical) and Landscape (horizontal).
      • Landscape is typically better for wide tables or dashboards.
    • Margins:
      • Adjust margins under Page Layout > Margins.
      • Choose Normal, Wide, or Narrow, or use Custom Margins for precise control.

    Adjusting orientation and margins helps avoid cut-off columns and improves spacing for binding or annotations.

    Microsoft Excel: A Guide To Controlling Your Page Layout

    Figure 3.7.3: Excel margin customization

    Headers and Footers: Add Informative Details

    Headers and footers provide important context for printed materials, including page numbers, dates, file paths, or document titles.

    To add a header or footer:

    • Go to Insert > Text > Header & Footer.
    • Excel switches to Page Layout View with editable header and footer fields.

    Common header/footer elements include:

    • Company name or logo (inserted as an image)
    • Document version or creation date
    • Page numbers (e.g., “Page 1 of 3”)
    • File path or sheet name

    Headers and footers are essential in formal reports, audits, and academic assignments to ensure traceability and document integrity.

    Scaling Options: Fit Content to a Page

    When worksheets exceed page boundaries, Excel's scaling options help ensure the data fits within the desired output size without cutting off rows or columns.

    To adjust scaling:

    • Go to File > Print > Scaling.
    • Choose options such as:
      • Fit Sheet on One Page
      • Fit All Columns on One Page
      • Fit All Rows on One Page

    Scaling allows users to compress data for compact presentation, but caution is needed—too much scaling may make content unreadable. Always preview the results before printing.


    Page written with material from COM112: Course Text Copyright © 2020 by The American Women's College is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License, except where otherwise noted.


    This page titled 3.7: Printing and Page Layout Features is shared under a CC BY-NC-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Gabrielle Brixey.

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