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Windows and MS Office Shortcuts If you're a Microsoft Office user who touch-types, you might prefer the keyboard to the mouse for entering commands. Odds are, though, that you wind up using the mouse, because Windows and Office keyboard shortcuts are difficult to remember, and trying to find them is a little like searching for the hidden goodies in an adventure program. Once found, though, shortcuts can prove to be invaluable time-savers. |
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Notes On Keyboard Shortcuts Mentioned Printer Friendly Version This is not a list of every shortcut in Windows and Office, only a list of those deemed most useful. Not covered are shortcuts that most people probably know already, such as copy (Ctrl-C), cut (Ctrl-X), or paste (Ctrl-V) objects.
Navigating Windows a Switch among applications: Windows-Tab or Alt-Tab. The Windows-Tab combination cycles through the taskbar buttons. When the program you want is selected, hit Enter to switch to that window. If more than one program is running, Alt-Tab brings up the task-switching window. Immediately releasing the keys switches you to the previous application. To jump to one of the other running programs instead, release Tab, but keep Alt held down. Each succeeding press of Tab moves the program selection box to the next application. Releasing the Alt key switches you to the selected program. If only two applications are running, Alt-tab toggles between them. a Open the Start menu: Ctrl-Esc or Windows. Either shortcut will open the Start menu. Use the Up and Down Arrow keys to move through the menu, and the Enter key to choose an item. The two shortcuts vary slightly depending on your version of Windows. Ctrl-Esc, Esc leaves the Start button selected but not pressed. In Windows 95, 98, and NT 4.0 (but not Windows 2000 and Me), Windows, Esc will return you to the window or desktop selection you were working with previously. a Go to the Quick Launch toolbar and launch a program: Ctrl-Esc, Esc, Tab, select with Arrow keys, Enter. a Minimize all open Windows and reveal the desktop: Windows-M or Windows-D. Mnemonics: This one's easy to remember; M for Minimize all and D for desktop. Note that Windows-D doesn't work under Windows 95, but Windows-M does. a Restore all Windows you previously minimized with Windows-M or Windows-D: Shift-Windows-M or repeat Windows-D: Shift-Windows-M or repeat Windows-D. a Move within the Windows Desktop and select items: Tab, Arrow, Enter. Once at the desktop, use the Tab key to cycle through the Start button, Quick Launch toolbar, other toolbars, taskbar button area, and icons on the desktop (and those in the system tray in Windows 2000). Use the Arrow keys to move around within any of these areas of the desktop or taskbar. Use the Enter key to select items. You must, for example, select the Start button to open the Start menu.
Windows Housekeeping Chores a Open the Run dialog box: Windows-R. Mnemonic: The Windows Run dialog. Mnemonic: Windows Explorer. Mnemonic: Windows Find file dialog box. Mnemonic: Windows is broken; check the system properties. Mnemonic: This is the same command Excel uses for editing the currently selected cell. This command and the next one work within programs, too. For example, you can use these commands when working in the File | Open dialog box in Word or Excel. Note that after you select text in Word, F2 begins the operation of moving the current selection. You then move the insertion cursor to the desired location and hit Enter. a Delete selected objects without sending them to the Recycle Bin: Shift-Delete. Mnemonic: A slightly shifted version of what happens when you hit Delete, which sends the objects to the Recycle Bin. Be careful with this command. Under some conditions, it will delete a file without asking for confirmation first. a
Bypass the CD-ROM AutoRun feature: Hold down
the Shift key while you insert the disk. a
View the Properties dialog for a selected object:
Alt-Enter.
Windows Global Shortcuts a
Restore, Move, Size, Minimize, Maximize, or Close the
main window of the currently selected program: Alt-Spacebar, letter key
(from those underlined above), or Alt-Spacebar, Arrow, Enter. a
Cycle through the tabs in a dialog box:
Ctrl-Tab and Ctrl-Shift-Tab. a Switch from window to window within the same program: Alt-F6. This won't work with all windows. It will, for example, toggle between a Find window and a document window in Microsoft Word, but it won't toggle between one document window and another. The command in Word for cycling through the open document windows is Ctrl-F6. a Basic font formatting for bold, underline, italic: Ctrl-B, Ctrl-U, Ctrl-I. You probably know these work in the Office programs you use, but try them in other programs as well; they may work. a
Undo: Ctrl-Z.
Microsoft Word Shortcuts a
Expand an Autotext entry: F3. a
Check the thesaurus: Shift-F7. a
Update fields: F9. a
Switch between the field code and field result for
selected fields: Shift-F9. a
Unlink a field: Shift-Ctrl-F9. a
Insert Date field: Alt-Shift-D. a
Move to the Style drop-down box to pick a style:
Ctrl-Shift-S.
Microsoft Access And Excel Shortcuts a
Enter time: Ctrl-: (colon).
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