4inches
3 inches
It depends on the mouse trap that you use if you use a little cheap one they are about 3 7/8 long with width of 1 13/16 and a height of 1/4 (all in inches)
The best defence of the Dusky hopping mouse is its shelter. It digs deep burrows with vertical entrances about 1.5 metres deep, and only three centimetres in width.
You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.You cannot widen individual cells. You widen columns. To do that you have to put the mouse between the two headings of a column, like between the A and B above those two columns. The mouse pointer will change and then click and drag to change the column width. Dragging always affects the column to the left of the mouse.
You double-click, causing an Auto-fit to happen.
You will see a pop up with the width of the column. You will also see a dotted line going down the sides of the column. You will also see the line with the double arrow as the mouse pointer.
It is the result of moving the mouse pointer to the boundary between column heading A and column heading B, or between any neighbouring column headings. Once it is visible, it is possible to change the column widths. The column to the left is always the one that will have its width changed.
{| class="tdefault" | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |- | width="369" | | width="369" | |} ---- === === === === === === === ===
Move your mouse pointer to the top of the column until the pointer takes the form of a small, downward-pointing, black arrow and click the left mouse button. This will select the column.Once selected, click the right mouse button and choose the Table Properties option. This will open the table properties dialogue box.From the dialogue box, choose the Column tab. In here you will be able to see, and/or alter the width of the column.Repeat these steps for all the columns you wish to set the width for.
There are several ways to adjust column width in Excel:Select at least one cell in each of the columns you want to adjust, then select the funtion from the menu bar. In Excel 2007, it's Home/Cells/Format/Column Width. If you selected one column, or if all of the columns you selected are the same width, it will show the current width in the window. Type the new width you want then press Enter or click OK.Another way to access that same window from the Excel 2007 menu is to type Alt+H O W.The rest of these methods are good for any version of Excel. In the column heading, the box above the top cell of the column containing the column letter, position the cursor on the right edge of the box. The cursor should change to a short vertical line with arrows pointing left and right. Press and hold the left mouse button. You will see the current column width. While continuting to press the mouse button, move the mouse left or right to your desired column width, then release the button.If you select several entire columns then do the previous procedure on any of the selected columns, all of the selected columns will have the new column width when you release the mouse button. To select an entire column you click on the column heading. To select several, you can either position the mouse in the column heading, press and hold the left mouse button as you move the cursor horizontally to the last column you want to select, then release the button, or after selecting the first column click on the headings of additional columns while pressing Ctrl.To automatically resize a column to fit the cell of the column with the most contents, double click the right edge of the column's heading.If you select several entire columns then double click the right edge of the heading of any one of them, each of the selected columns will be fitted to its own widest cell.
It needs to be on the boundary between the two column headings. When it is in the right place, a double-arrowed line will appear, indicating that the column can be widened or narrowed.
If you suspect that there is a hidden column, consider doing this: 1. Press Ctrl + A. This will select all cells in your current sheet. 2. Position your mouse pointer between two columns so that the icon changes. Example: You could place the mouse pointer between the column names A and B, on the line. 3. Click and drag the line so that the width of all columns in the sheet is increased. 4. The hidden columns [if any] will now be visible. To go back to the previous width of columns, use Undo [Ctrl Z]