Many times documentation or information from Computer Hope and other computer related documentation may list commands such as ^X, ^C, ^Z, etc. this means CTRL-X, CTRL-C, CTRL-Z, etc. In other words, a user would want to press and hold the CONTROL or CTRL key and then press the letter following the caret.
Saturday, March 24, 2012
Ctrl
Many times documentation or information from Computer Hope and other computer related documentation may list commands such as ^X, ^C, ^Z, etc. this means CTRL-X, CTRL-C, CTRL-Z, etc. In other words, a user would want to press and hold the CONTROL or CTRL key and then press the letter following the caret.
Alt
Short for Alternate, Alt is a modifier key located
on both sides of the spacebar key on IBM compatible computer keyboards.
In the picture to the right, is an example of what this keyboard key may look
like. This term may
also be used to describe a key combination such as
the below example.
Ctrl + Alt + Del
Thursday, March 22, 2012
Function keys
Keys that act as shortcuts for performing certain functions such as saving files or printing data. Function keys usually are lined along the top of the keyboard labeled F1 through F12. Below is an
picture of the Saitek Gamers' keyboard,
which gives an example of where the function keys are often located on the keyboard.
In the past, earlier Apple Macintosh computers did not have function keys and
some early IBM computers and keyboards had two rows of function keys, with the
second row containing F13 - F24.
Key
- When referring to a computer keyboard, a key is a single button on the keyboard. Letters, numbers, functions, and symbols are all represented on keys.
- A key is also a tool used to lock and unlock a computer, computer drive or other computer related device. If you have lost the key to your computer device, Computer Hope cannot assist you with obtaining a new one. Contact the manufacturer of the product that is locked.
- When referring to the computer Microsoft Windows registry, a registry key, or key for short, is a term used to identify an item in the registry, such as HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE.
- The term key or keyed may also be used to describe a cable with physical dimensions that causes a cable such as a ribbon cable to be connected only one direction. In some rare cases this may prevent a cable from being properly connected to a drive. For example, the manufacturer of a floppy disk drive may have keyed their connection differently than the cable manufacturer has. In this situation, the user may either be required to purchase a different brand of cable or floppy drive, or modify the key on the cable.
- When referring to encryption a key is a set of instructions that is used to encrypt and decrypt data.
Keyboard
One of the main input devices used on a computer, a PC's keyboard looks very similar to the keyboards of electric typewriters, with some additional keys. Below is a graphic of the Saitek Gamers' keyboard with indicators pointing to each of the major portions of the keyboard.
Arrow keys
Alternatively
referred to as cursor keys, arrow keys are keyboard keys
located in-between the standard keyboard and the numeric pad on
computer keyboards. These four keys are the left arrow (back arrow),
up arrow, down arrow, and the right arrow (forward arrow).
In the picture to the right, is a closer look at what the arrow keys
may look like on your keyboard. Some keyboards such as the Microsoft
natural keyboard may
arrange these keys differently. Below are just a few of the different
ways
these keys can be used.
- Move the text cursor on the screen.
- Use in combination with other keys for shortcut keys. For example, pressing the Alt key and the left arrow key in Microsoft Internet Explorer will take you back one Internet page.
- Move a character in a computer game.
- Select text. For example, holding down shift and pressing the arrow key in the direction you want to highlight text.
- Move the mouse pointer using the keyboard instead of the mouse.
- How to move the mouse cursor with the keyboard in Windows.
In the below picture, the Saitek Gamers' keyboard
shows where the arrow keys can be found. In addition to the traditional arrow keys, as shown above, the numeric keypad can also function as arrow keys when Num Lock is
turned off.
End key
A
key found on keyboards usually below the home
key that moves the cursor
to the end of the line, paragraph, page, screen, cell, or document
depending on the program and where your cursor is currently positioned.
An example of how
the End key could be used is to move the cursor to the middle
of a line of text and press the End key, which would move to the end of
the line of text. Using a key combination such as pressing the Shift key
and the End key together would highlight the
text from the cursor to the end of the line.
Home key
An example of how the Home key could be used is to move the cursor to the middle of a line of text and press the Home key, which moves the cursor to the beginning of the line. Using a key combination such as pressing the Shift key and the Home key together would highlight the text from the cursor position to the beginning of the line.
Print screen key
Sometimes abbreviated as PRTSC or Prt Scrn, the print screen key is a keyboard key found on most computer keyboards. When pressed, the key either sends the current screen image to the computer clipboard or the computer printer depending on the operating system or software program the key is pressed in.
Tuesday, March 20, 2012
Insert key
Sometimes displayed as INS on the keyboard, the Insert key
is a keyboard key located on the majority of all computers that allows
text to be inserted. When insert is enabled, the text inserted in a
document will not overwrite any other text. However, when disabled, text
will be overwritten.
Backspace key
Monday, March 19, 2012
Macro
ESC
1. Short for escape, esc is a key located on
the top-left of a computer keyboard that allows a user to cancel or abort operations.
2. Short for escalation, esc is used to describe or refer to an escalation number dealing with an important customer related issue.
3. Escape is also shorthand for an escape character, an escape is a single
backward slash
( \ ) in Linux, programming,
and regular expressions that perform a special function or to have a
character treated as plain text and not a function. Below are some
examples of how an escape could be used.
\*
The above example would treat the asterisk as a plain text asterisk and not as a
wild card or
metacharacter.
\.
This next example is similar to the first example because the period is
also a wild card, which represents any single character. So if you need
match a period and not every character you must escape it.
\" or \'
The above example would treat the quote character as a
quote character and not a beginning or end container. For example, in programming languages such as
Perl this is required if you're printing text to a file or the screen that contains a quote.
In other words the command print "This is a \" quote.";
would print This is a " quote without escaping the quote in the
middle you would receive an error.
\
When a filename or directory needs a space in Linux you can use a
backward slash followed by a space, to escape the space in a name. If this
isn't done, Linux will treat anything after the space as an option or
additional command.
\n
Finally, escape characters are also used in escape sequences, to create a
function or command. For example, the above \n would create a
newline character to the file or screen. See
our escape sequence definition for additional
examples.
Caps lock
Computer keyboard togglekey that enables or disables all the letters from being typed in uppercase. When the caps lock
key is enabled, a user would type LIKE THIS and when it is disabled, a
user would type like this. Users who keep their caps lock enabled and type in all uppercase are often considered to be YELLING when they are typing.
In the picture to the right, is an example of the keyboard LED's that indicate
if keyboard togglekeys are enabled or disabled. In this example picture the num
lock key is currently the only enabled key, indicated by the blue LED.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Friday, March 16, 2012
Shift key
2. Microsoft command line command that changes the position of replaceable parameters in a batch program. Additional information about this command found on our shift command page.
Tab
2. In a software program window and on the Internet, a tab allows for the user to access different parts of a menu, display, or page. below is an example of what tabs may look like in a Microsoft Windows window.
4. A keyboard key that inserts a tab character or advances the cursor to other tab settings on a line. This key can also move between selectable items in a dialog box. In the picture to the right, is an example of what the tab key may look like on the keyboard.
5. Small plastic piece used to enable/disable write-protection on floppy diskette drives.
Edit mode
Alternatively referred to as edit, edit mode is a
software ability that allows the modification of files. For example,
MS-DOS edit command is a software program with the edit mode ability to
edit and modify files on the computer. Some software programs will have
different modes, usually "view" and "edit"; when in the "view mode" the
user can only look at the file; however, in "edit mode" the user can
view and edit the file. Often this is done for files that are shared
between multiple users on a network.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Save
The process of writing data to a storage medium such as a floppy diskette or a hard disk drive. The save option is found in almost all programs commonly under the "File" drop-down-menu.
When clicking the Save option, the file will be saved as its previous name. However, if the file is a new file, the software program will commonly prompt the user for the name he or she wishes.
When saving a file, if that file already exists, the software program the user is using will commonly prompt the user asking if he or she wants to overwrite that file. If the user chooses to overwrites that file, the previous version will be replaced with the new version.
Also see: Autosave, Save As
When clicking the Save option, the file will be saved as its previous name. However, if the file is a new file, the software program will commonly prompt the user for the name he or she wishes.
When saving a file, if that file already exists, the software program the user is using will commonly prompt the user asking if he or she wants to overwrite that file. If the user chooses to overwrites that file, the previous version will be replaced with the new version.
Also see: Autosave, Save As
Shortcut
- When referring to Microsoft Windows, a shortcut is a link that points to a program on the computer. Shortcuts allow users to create links to their programs in any folder, Start bar, Taskbar, Desktop or other locations on their computer. A shortcut in Windows is commonly identified by a small arrow in the bottom corner of the icon and are files that end with a file extension of .lnk. In the picture to the right, is an example of a Windows shortcut that links to the game Company of Heroes. If you're more familiar with Linux you can think of a shortcut as a symbolic link.
- A shortcut is also used to describe a keyboard shortcut.
Wednesday, March 14, 2012
Copy
How to copy text
a. Highlight the text you wish to copy, this could be one word, one line, a paragraph or all of the text in the document.
b. Click Edit from the top menu in the program and click
Copy
or
Right-click the selected text and select copy.
or
Highlight the text and use the shortcut key
Ctrl+C or Ctrl+Insert.
c. Once the above steps have been done the text will be moved into a temporary area known as the
clipboard. You can then paste the text any number of times into any other document until something else is moved into the clipboard.
Practice copying text
Using the below two text fields try copying the text in the
first box and pasting it into the second box.
Cut
1. To remove an item from the current location to a temporary alternate location, generally called the
clipboard, and then having the capability of
pasting that item to another location. Only programs that allow text to be removed can be
cut, other programs will only enable a user to
copy. For
example, you can cut text from any non-protected word processor file.
However, you cannot cut text from a read-only word processor file.
How to cut text
a. Highlight the text you wish to cut, this could be one word, one line, a paragraph or all of the text in the document.
b. Click Edit from the top menu in the program and click
Cut
or
Right-click the selected text and select cut.
or
Highlight the text you wish to cut press the Ctrl + X
shortcut key to cut the selected text.
c. Once the above steps have been done the text will be moved into a temporary area known as the
clipboard. You can then paste the text any number of times into any other document until something else is moved into the clipboard.
Practice cutting text
Using the below two text fields try cutting the text in the
first box and pasting it into the second box.
Monday, March 12, 2012
Apple Macintosh shortcut keys
Note that not all of the below shortcut keys will work in all versions of Mac OS.
Open Apple + Down | Opens the selected icon. |
Shift + Click | Select the icon and add it to the set of those selected. |
Tab | Highlight the next icon inside the folder, in alphabetical order. |
Shift + Tab | Highlight the previous icon inside the folder, in alphabetical order. |
Left arrow | Used when viewing by icon to select the icon to the left of the one highlighted. |
Right arrow | Used when viewing by icon to select icon to the right of the one highlighted. |
Up arrow | Used to select the icon above the one currently highlighted. |
Down arrow | Used to select the icon below the one currently highlighted. |
Open Apple + ? | Mac help |
Open Apple + E | Eject |
Open Apple + Shift + Up Arrow | Used to direct the input focus to the desktop level. |
Open Apple + M | Minimize window |
Open Apple + N | New finder window |
Open Apple + Shift + N | New folder |
Open Apple + W | Close the current window. |
Open Apple + C | Copy the elected item to the clipboard. |
Open Apple + X | Cut the selected item. |
Open Apple + V | Paste item from the clipboard |
Open Apple + L | Make alias |
Open Apple + R | Show original item |
Open Apple + T | Add to favorites |
Open Apple + O | Open the selected icon. |
Open Apple + F | Display the find dialog box. |
Open Apple + G | Repeat the last find operation. |
Open Apple + Shift + G | Takes a snapshot of the screen and saves it to a PICT file. |
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