I wonder why... It must be a mystery!
Your computer has either been hijacked by the person right behind you (that tall guy that always follows you around at the grocery store), or YOU HAVE ALWAYS HAD CAPS LOCK ON LIKE THIS.
It is probably because of the person behind you though, because he has a lot of free time. Good luck!
When you hold down the shift key while your Caps Lock is on, it reverses it so that it is lowercase instead of being uppercase.
The up arrow button (right above the [ALPHA] button) followed by [ALPHA] will turn on ALPHA-lock which is what you want versus (lowercase) alpha-lock. So in buttons, [^] [ALPHA] [letters...]
Hold Shift and press the 2 button on the set of numbers above the letters.
Hold the button for however long you want (This will be the time the light turns green to press the letters) and press the letters
Hold the button for however long you want (This will be the time the light turns green to press the letters) and press the letters
Press the FM button marked clock in small letters. Time will flash. Press the #4 preset button to set hour; press #5 for minute. Press the FM button again to complete.
Press the FM button marked clock in small letters. Time will flash. Press the #4 preset button to set hour; press #5 for minute. Press the FM button again to complete.
on your keyboard there is a button above the addition and equals sign that says num lk. Press that button and you can type again with letters.
No, it just reverses the capital system so that normal typing is CAPITALS and if you hold shift it changes it to lowercase letters.
For example, box is in lowercase while BOX is in uppercase. The term is a vestige of the days when typesetters kept capital letters in a box above the lowercase letters. A program that distinguishes between uppercase and lowercase is said to be case sensitive.
In normal typing, you must hold the shift button to use capital letters or symbols located on the number keys, with CAPS LOCK on, you can type letters without holding the shift button, although you will still have to hold it to use the symbols on the number keys. Also secondary symbols on the other symbol buttons. The Caps Lock key makes it so when it is pressed the letters that you write come out in capitals. You do not have to hold it down for you to use it. It'll make the letters stay in capitals until you press it again, making it so you write in lowercase.
Hmmm, I think you mean a "state button." A toggle and a state button are both one and the same thing. Essentially, a state button indicates whether the state of the function is on or off. A toggle, of course, is just another term for the same thing. For example, if you press the caps lock key on your keyboard, you have changed the state from standard lowercase to typing only uppercase letters. This also toggles the caps lock indicator LED to light up (presuming your keyboard is so equipped). When you press the caps lock again, it changes the state back from uppercase to lowercase and turns off the LED.If this is not what you mean and you need further assistance, feel free to let me know.
YOU PRESS THE BUTTON THEN FINISHYOU PRESS THE BUTTON THEN FINISHYOU PRESS THE BUTTON THEN FINISH