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Tips.Net > ExcelTips Home > General > Slowing Down Mouse Selection

Slowing Down Mouse Selection

Summary: Trying to select a range of cells using the mouse? If such selections involve scrolling the screen, sometimes the scrolling can occur just way too fast. Here’s a couple ways to select just the cells you want. (This tip works with Microsoft Excel 97, Excel 2000, Excel 2002, and Excel 2003.)

You may have noticed that it is sometimes difficult to select quite a few cells when you are using the mouse. As you move the mouse past the bottom of the screen, the rows may zip by too fast to select them. Move the mouse back up to the top of the screen, and the rows zip by in the opposite direction.

It may sound trite, but one of the most common solutions to this problem is to use the keyboard in conjunction with the mouse to do your selecting. The easiest way to do this is by clicking the insertion point at the position where you want the selection to start, and then hold down the Shift key while you click where you want the selection to end.

However, if you don't want to use the keyboard, and only rely on the mouse, your options are a bit more limited. Perhaps the best idea is to get a new mouse. The new Microsoft Wheel mouse with the scrolling wheel between the two buttons comes in handy for this.

Barring either of these solutions you may be able to fine-tune your use of the mouse when scrolling. Excel actually includes two scrolling speeds. To use the slower speed when selecting cells, move the mouse down to where the worksheet tabs appear. This scrolls downward at a relatively moderate speed. Moving the mouse below the worksheet tabs sends the scrolling into full-speed mode. The "moderate speed" zone for scrolling upward is the column indicators (A, B, C, etc.). The actual differences between these scroll speeds depends on the speed of your computer and how many other tasks your system is running.

The final option to try is to slow down the mouse speed using Windows itself. If you are using Windows XP, just click the Start button and choose Control Panel from the Start menu. What you do from that point depends on how you have the Control Panel configured.

If you are viewing the Control Panel in Category view, you'll see a message that says "Pick a Category." Follow these steps:

  1. Click the Printers and Other Hardware link.
  2. Click the Mouse link.

If you are viewing the Control Panel in Classic view, you'll see icons for the various applets available in the Control Panel. Double-click the Mouse applet.

Regardless of the Control Panel view you are using, at this point you should be viewing the Mouse Properties dialog box. Make sure the Motion tab or the Pointer Options tab is displayed. (Click here to see a related figure.)

Adjust the mouse's Speed setting so it is more toward the Slow (left) side, then click OK. You may need to play with the setting a bit so that you get just the speed you want.

Tip #2422 applies to Microsoft Excel versions: 97 | 2000 | 2002 | 2003


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