Forum Discussion
Vertical Scroll encompasses a million rows, most of which are blank
- Aug 31, 2020
Do the following in the desktop version of Excel.
Select the first entirely blank row by clicking on its row number.
Hold down Shift and drag the 'thumb' of the vertical scroll bar down until you see row 1048576.
Hold down Shift and click on the row number of row 1048576.
This will select everything from the first blank row to the bottom of the worksheet.
On the Home tab of the ribbon, click Clear > Clear All.
Press Alt+F11 to activate the Visual Basic Editor.
Press Ctrl+G to activate the Immediate window.
Type ActiveSheet.UsedRange and press Enter.
Switch back to Excel and save the workbook.
Does the vertical scroll bar now act normally?
Do the following in the desktop version of Excel.
Select the first entirely blank row by clicking on its row number.
Hold down Shift and drag the 'thumb' of the vertical scroll bar down until you see row 1048576.
Hold down Shift and click on the row number of row 1048576.
This will select everything from the first blank row to the bottom of the worksheet.
On the Home tab of the ribbon, click Clear > Clear All.
Press Alt+F11 to activate the Visual Basic Editor.
Press Ctrl+G to activate the Immediate window.
Type ActiveSheet.UsedRange and press Enter.
Switch back to Excel and save the workbook.
Does the vertical scroll bar now act normally?
HansVogelaar - your solution fixed the problem when I view the excel sheet in the browser view however when I re-open it in desktop (after applying your solution and saving) I still have the same issue.
Any thoughts?
- Sep 30, 2024If you suspect there are extra blank rows in your spreadsheet beyond what you're actually using, you can easily determine it by pressing Ctrl+End. This will take you to the "last cell". If this is on a row far beyond what you think it should be, then you can follow the instructions mentioned earlier to get rid of the extra rows. You can also press F5 (Go To), then press Special, and choose Last Cell and press OK.