In other words, these keyboard shortcuts are Alt + 0 + 9 through Alt + 0 + 1. Commands 19 to 45 have keyboard shortcuts where the second key is always a 0 and the third key is a letter ranging from A to Z.Lots of similar questions going on but google and stack overflow are not touching the part I think I need. I am trying to import a pipe delimited text file with a macro.
![]() This question is application specific (Office) I know about OS system shortcuts (and use those often as well).What I am interested in is leveraging keyboard commands, since although not GUI and oh-so-not-nouveau- cool, are the old fashioned way expert users get work done really fast. I'm also not interested in the Accessibility feature (Ctrl-F2) which is very slow compared to direct access since you're essentially replicating a mouse action, rather than an actual keyboard shortcut. All this is known and used often. In Windows Excel 2003, you can access any menu command through the keyboard in a very efficient way.A lot of Mac people respond to Alt-key questions with the standard shortcuts (Command "O" is open) or thinking the problem is that there is user confusion because there is no Alt key ("it's the Option or Command key"). If you've never used Excel on a Windows machine, you will likely misunderstand this request (based on my review of Google search results). Love strange love full movie free downloadFortunately in "Ribbon" versions of Office, you can still type most Alt key shortcuts from memory. With Windows Alt key navigation, you can navigate by touch typing even if you're using an infrequently used menu combination by holding down the Alt key and reading the menu, seeing the shortcut (underlined letter), typing it, and moving on to the next submenu (or the next work task).Granted, Microsoft's new Ribbon interface (started on Office 2007 on Windows) seems to indicate the world thinks more GUI is needed, but I've yet to find an expert user who doesn't hate it. In addition to just being faster, this approach is faster if you get "mouse fatigue" (eye strain or wrist/hand strain or both), especially on multiple and large displays at high resolution. WAO ( window/ arrange/h orizontal), and so on through tens or hundreds of very frequently used menu combinations. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorKevin ArchivesCategories |