 This video is going to lead you through how to insert special symbols in Google Sheets. This comes up a lot for me, especially when using the squared or cube symbol. In Excel, you can use font character formatting to make a superscript or even a subscript, but you don't really have that option as of this recording date to do that in Google Sheets. So a couple quick options. You could use carrots, so you could just write this, feet, carrot, squared, and just call it done and say that's good enough. You can also use alt codes, and I'll include a bunch in this, but for instance, the alt code for squared is 0178, so you could write feet and then alt 0178 and let that go, and now you'll have squared. You can also use copy and paste, so down here, for instance, we have this little squared. Grab that with ctrl C, type foot, ctrl V for squared, and you can also use a function. So we could write equals, let's put foot in quotation marks, and then we'll write ampersand, care, parens, and then it was 01278 and parens. And actually, I got that wrong, it's 0178, my bad, 0178. Hit Enter, and that'll give you the foot squared just like above. The formatting difference is only just because I hadn't copied the formatting down there, so we can take this formatting and put it there, so it's large as well. With character codes, I have all of those down here for a whole bunch of different numbers, superscript numbers, subscript numbers, math symbols, fractions, currencies, and bullets. These character codes sometimes will work with the alt, but they'll always work with the C-H-A-R, at least in all the systems I tested. If you test a system that doesn't work in, please let me know.