click the right button
To access shortcut menus with a three-button mouse click the right hand/secondary mouse button. The shortcut menu will show up on the screen once you do this.
Normally you would click the right hand/secondary mouse button but you may configure any of the buttons to work within the Keyboard and Mouse section of System Preferences.
Normally you would click the right hand/secondary mouse button but you may configure any of the buttons to work within the Keyboard and Mouse section of System Preferences.
shortcut menu
In GstarCAD's interface Tools>Options>User Preferences dialog box, cancel the ticking off about "shortcut menus in drawing area". You also can click "right-click customization" and set the function of right mouse button according your custom.
It is clicking the button on the left of the mouse. Clicking the button on the right of the mouse can do other things, like bring up a shortcut menu.
Check the mouse settings to make sure that the mouse is not configured for left-handed operation
On a PCs and Linux the left mouse button is used for clicking, or selecting files ect. The right mouse button is used for opening up menus related to the item for help. There is no right mouse button on Macs, but only the left mouse button with the same functions.
shortcut menu
The left mouse button is used primarily to select objects in a graphical interface. Some computing systems allow the user to switch the mouse buttons around, particularly to allow for those who are right-handed. In such configurations, the left mouse button serves an auxiliary purpose, such as opening pop-up menus.
It is a menu with items that are relevant to what you are doing at that time. Shortcut menus from a right click on your mouse or the shortcut menu key on your keyboard normally show items that are relevant to what you are working in. In other words they are giving you options based on the context of your work.
On Windows operating systems, the right mouse button (if you are left handed and have the mouse setup for left handed use, it would be the left mouse button) is used to display Context Menus. These menus contain shortcuts to various common commands. In a word processor, it may contains Cut/Copy/Paste commands. In a web browser, it may contain Back/Forward/Stop/Refresh commands. The commands contained within a Context Menu really isn't standard, although many programs that do the same thing as the other may have very similar menus. Its best to check the help documentation for more information. If you are running a version of Linux with a Desktop Manager, the same thing applies. It would all come down to what application you are running.