 Excel makes it easy to copy the contents of a cell and paste it someplace else on your spreadsheet. I'm going to right click in this cell there, B7, and drag to the left to select that row of cells. And then I'm going to right click and click copy to copy those cells. The marching ants, as a lot of people call them, tell you, that is the selection. I'm going to click up here and cell A and then right click to bring up my paste menu. And there are a number of options there. The first option, paste exactly what you're copying. The second option, just paste the values in those cells. It doesn't bring any formatting. The third option will paste in the formulas. There's no formulas here. These are all text. But if he had formulas, it would just copy the formulas over. The transpose is a neat tool that allows you to transpose from a row to a column or from a column to a row. This column just copies the formatting and pasted in the new location. The last one, paste a link. It doesn't bring the formatting necessarily. But this is what a link is. I'm going to click that and make those links. Now if I go here into this cell, if I look up there, you can see that this is linked back to B7. So if I change that to numbers, that link cell changes too.