Alt + tab
switches to the last screen you were looking at
alt+ F4
closes what you are looking at
windows+ D
minimizes everything and goes to your desktop
Windows + L
logs you off
A link. ;p
A link
A link
(Apex) A link.
Shortcuts are there to give you easier access to the program. Typically program files are stored in the Program Files folder. Having a shortcut on the desktop and Start Menu let's you access it easily without messing with the other components in the folder by accident.
When you copy something, you create a clone file, and those two files are completely independent of each other, that means if something happens to one file (ie if you delete it), then nothing will happen to the clone of the file, and it works vice versa. On the other hand, a shortcut is dependant on the file it is leading to. If something happens to the mother file (lets just call it that), like deletion, then the shortcut will be useless. What a shortcut does is just keeps you from going into a bunch of directories (aka, my computer, or documents, etc.) to access a certain file. Source: 10 years of using computers
Make a Shortcut on your Desktop (Internet Explorer)Go to Poptropica and right click on the screen. Choose "create shortcut" from the menu and add Poptropica to your desktop, or to any other folder you choose.(or you can click the link for Poptropica on other sites you may already have, such as Funbrain.)
yes and no. You can also access it through other websites. If you go to youdagames click time management games and on the first page, it is goodgame cafe.
if all other ways are down or cannot get to then click start and it will be there click it and your on the internet
You can click on the Taskbar to the other workbooks. You can use Ctrl-F6 as a shortcut for switching between open workbooks. You can use Alt-Tab as a shortcut key for switching between various applications that you may have open.
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.
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.
Just like any Microsoft compliant application, the Title Bar in MS Excel displays the Application Name and the current Filename of the Worsheet, this can be found o the left most portion of the bar.By double-clicking on the Title-Bar, it switches its window Maximize to Restore Mode and vice-versa.You could also move the active window by click-dragging it on the Title Bar when in Restore Mode.Performing a Right-Mouse click on the Title Bar would also show the a Short cut menu for Restoring, Minimizing, Maximizing, etc the active Window
my.hrw.com/math06_07 has a calculator.