Windows.XP.in.a.Nutshell.1002005.2Ed [Electronic resources] نسخه متنی

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Windows.XP.in.a.Nutshell.1002005.2Ed [Electronic resources] - نسخه متنی

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Menus

The
menu is a
place where you can cram all the functionality of a program. Rather
than littering your screen with all available commands, they are
categorically arranged into cascading lists, as shown in Figure 3-16. Modern applications have become so elaborate,
however, that menus are often very complex, making it a pain to have
to sift through them all to find the command you want. Thus,
designers invented toolbars (discussed later in this chapter) as
shortcuts for the items we actually use. It makes us wonder, then,
why we need menus in the first place?


Figure 3-18. Nested (
cascading) menus provide access to all options and features of an application

If you ever get lost, menus tend to be pretty consistent across
applications. For example, you can almost always find Open, Save,
Print, and Exit in the File menu, just as Cut, Copy, Paste, and Undo
are always in the Edit menu.

See Chapter 2 for more information on using
menus. See "Context Menus", earlier in
this chapter, for details on the menu that appears when you
right-click on something.

Press F10 or Alt (by itself) to enter the menu, use the cursor keys
to navigate, and press Enter to select an item. Once
you're in the menus, press the underlined letter of
a menu item to quickly jump to that item, or if no letter is
underlined, press the first letter of the item's
caption. You can also jump right to a specific menu from anywhere
else in the application by pressing the key of the underlined letter
while holding Alt. Look to the right of many menu items for
additional keyboard shortcuts. For example, open the Edit menu in
most applications, and you'll see Ctrl-X, Ctrl-C,
and Ctrl-V alongside the Cut, Copy, and Paste commands, respectively.


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