A great deal of people using spreadsheets love using keyboard shortcuts.
Here are some selected Excel and Calc default keyboard shortcuts – and the difference in accessing the related functions. Below are some additional shortcut keys that are useful in Calc.
| Function | Excel Shortcut | Calc Shortcut |
|---|---|---|
| Rearranges the relative or absolute references (for example, A1, $A$1, $A1, A$1) in the input field | F4 | Shift+F4 |
| Edit cell comment (known as “notes” in Calc) | Shift+F2 | Control+F1 |
| Fill right or Fill down | Control+R or Control+D | No equivalent |
| Go to specific cell | F5 | F5 (shows Navigator) |
| Insert Function | No standard equivalent | Control+F2 |
| Enter into all currently selected cells | Control+Enter | Alt+EnterAlt+Shift+Enter (also applies the cell format)
In both cases cells must be contiguous. |
List of navigation and selection shortcut keys
| Shortcut | Command |
| Ctrl+Home | Moves the cursor to the first cell in the sheet (A1). |
| Ctrl+End | Moves the cursor to the last cell on the sheet that contains data. |
| Home | Moves the cursor to the first cell of the current row. |
| End | Moves the cursor to the last cell of the current row in a column containing data. |
| Ctrl+Left Arrow | Moves the cursor to the left edge of the current data range. If the column to the left of the cell that contains the cursor is empty |
| Ctrl+Right Arrow | Moves the cursor to the right edge of the current data range. If the column to the right of the cell that contains the cursor is empty |
| Ctrl+Up Arrow | Moves the cursor to the top edge of the current data range. If the row above the cell that contains the cursor is empty |
| Ctrl+Down Arrow | Moves the cursor to the bottom edge of the current data range. If the row below the cell that contains the cursor is empty |
| Ctrl+Shft+Arrow | Selects all cells containing data from the current cell to the end of the continuous range of data cells |
| Ctrl+ Page Up | Moves one sheet to the left. In the page preview it moves to the previous print page. |
| Ctrl+Page Down | Moves one sheet to the right. In the page preview it moves to the next print page. |
| Page Up | Moves the viewable rows up one screen. |
| Page Down | Moves the viewable rows down one screen. |
| Alt+Page Up | Moves the viewable columns one screen to the left. |
| Alt+Page Down | Moves the viewable columns one screen to the right. |
| Shft+Ctrl+Page Up | Adds the previous sheet to the current selection of sheets. If all the sheets in a spreadsheet are selected |
| Shft+Ctrl+Page Down | Adds the next sheet to the current selection of sheets. If all the sheets in a spreadsheet are selected |
| Ctrl+* | Selects the data range that contains the cursor. A range is a contiguous cell range that contains data and is bounded by empty row and columns. The * key is the multiplication sign on the numeric key pad. |
| Ctrl+/ | Selects the matrix formula range that contains the cursor. The / key is the division sign on the numeric key pad. |

My name is Stephanie Krishnan and I'm passionate about the way that open source software and its community can help small businesses and individuals with their productivity and lives. One of the biggest arguments I get from business owners, however, is lack of support options. I decided to put together my own support blog to help people be productive at various levels with one of my favourite open source alternatives: OpenOffice.org! I do this through tutorials, downloadable templates and answers to questions from readers!

