Typing the ‘L’ in this shortcut requires your right hand. This data is only collected under the Enhanced participation level. Within a new window displayed, change the current web address to set them as Chrome homepage. In the drop-down combo box, select the set you want to remove, and then click Delete. This is an Alt sequence that you really can’t follow on the screen anymore (you won’t see any hot keys appear), since it’s a ghost-like or “zombie” carryover from Excel 2003 (those Alt sequences were preserved, even though the ribbon menu has changed). Click the menu element of your choice to access the required menu section. You’ll probably need your right hand to type the ‘H’, which is inconvenient if you’re used to having your right hand on the mouse (like me).
This is basically Home > Delete> Sheet (which is painfully slow), but using your keyboard instead of the mouse. This is the fastest (typing ‘D’ is faster than clicking on ‘Delete’). I call this a “ hybrid” shortcut since it combines mouse and keyboard into one shortcut. The ‘D’ is underlined in Delete, which means you can just type ‘D’ instead of clicking on Delete. This does the same thing as RC-, except you’re using the hot key instead of clicking. (2) Hybrid shortcut: RC-D (Right-Click, followed by typing ‘D’). You’ll see the following when right-clicking over the tab - just click on Delete: (1) Right-clicking: RC- while hovering over the tab.
The second one is the fastest, and hence my favorite. Below are four different shortcuts to delete Excel worksheets.