What does key combination mean?

What does key combination mean?

A key combination is the use of two or more keys on a keyboard to generate a specific result. These keys are pressed either at the same time, or one after the other while holding down each key until the last key is pressed.

What key combination is right for a paragraph?

Align and format paragraphs

To do this Press
Align the paragraph to the right. Ctrl+R
Indent the paragraph. Ctrl+M
Remove a paragraph indent. Ctrl+Shift+M
Create a hanging indent. Ctrl+T

What are combination keys give example?

Examples of key combinations

  • Ctrl + S – Save currently open file.
  • Ctrl + C – Copy highlighted text or an image.
  • Ctrl + V – Paste text or an image from clipboard.
  • Ctrl + Alt + Del – Open up the Task Manager or option to change password for the user’s account.
  • Ctrl + B – Change highlighted text to be bold.

What’s the difference between a key sequence and a key combination?

Use keyboard shortcut instead. In content for a technical audience, it’s OK to distinguish between a key sequence (two or more keys selected sequentially) and a key combination (two or more keys selected simultaneously). If you use these terms, explain the difference. Use numeric keypad on the first mention.

What are the combinations for the Windows Logo key?

Windows logo key + Period: Win+. Snap the current screen to the left or right gutter. Also blocks the Windows logo key + Shift + Period key combination. Windows logo key + C: Win+C: Activate Cortana in listening mode (after user has enabled the shortcut through the UI). Windows logo key + I: Win+I:

How to get a list of predefined key combinations?

You can list the value of the WEKF_PredefinedKey.Id to get a complete list of key combinations defined by a keyboard filter. You can use the values in the WEKF_PredefinedKey.Id column to configure the Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI) class WEKF_PredefinedKey.

What do you use to describe pressing a key on a keyboard?

Use select to describe pressing a key on a physical or on-screen keyboard. Don’t use press, depress, hit, or strike. Don’t use depressed to describe an indented toolbar button unless you have no other choice.