The key that moves the cursor down the page to begin a new line is the "Enter" key. When pressed, it creates a line break in text documents or input fields, allowing you to start typing on the next line. In some applications, holding the "Shift" key while pressing "Enter" will create a line break without starting a new paragraph.
It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.It moves the cursor onto a new line and starts a new paragraph.
It moves it to the beginning of a line while typing.
The return key.
When the cursor moves over text, it looks like an X, with a small line through the middle.
carriage return, line feed
It stands for carriage return/line feed. The names are a holdover from typewriter days. They are two control codes in ASCII (American Standard Code for Information Interchange); cr returns the cursor to the beginning of the line, lf moves the cursor down to the next line.
The cursor shows, as a tall thin line which is usually set to blink slowly.
Use the "Home" key (it's to the right of Backspace)
A blinking vertical line is a cursor.
Word wrapWhen the text you're typing gets to the end of the line, the cursor wraps to the next line. It places the text below on the page instead of allowing the words to continue on beyond the right margin.
Cursor
It allows you to do continual typing without worrying about needing to press "enter" to get to the next line if you are towards the end of the line. If a word is too long, word wrap will automatically move that word to the next line. This increases your typing speed. You do not have to constantly watch your screen to see where the cursor is located (for instance, you're looking at a document and typing it word for word so you don't need to take your eyes off the document you're typing to see if you need to move down a line). Unlike on a manual typewriter, when the cursor in the word-processor gets to the end of a line, if the operator is still typing, it moves that part of the unfinished word, and places it on the next line. This prevents half a word at the end of a line (unless the operator deliberately wants it that way!)