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Apple’s keyboard layouts look very much like standard Windows keyboards. The biggest difference is in the two keys on either side of the spacebar. On a PC, the keys closest to the spacebar are labeled Alt; the next one over has a Windows logo. On a Mac, the keys closest to the spacebar have an icon (Command) that looks like a four-bladed propeller or electric fan. These Command keys both have the same function. The next one over is the Option key.
The Command key is used in almost all keyboard shortcuts. It’s one of the most important things to know about the Mac.
Another key that may not be familiar to PC users is at the upper-right on Apple keyboards. It’s the eject button for the optical drive (that reads and writes CDs and DVDs). You see the same symbol on the eject button on home audio devices. Continuing to the left on stand-alone keyboards, you find a key with a speaker symbol, which turns the system sound on and off. It’s a mute button, in effect. It is followed by two keys that raise and lower the volume.
Applying horizontal or vertical scale. To apply horizontal or vertical scaling to selected text, do one of the following things: Choose Style Horizontal/Vertical Scale, choose Horizontal or Vertical from the Scale drop-down menu, enter a value in the field, and then click OK. Use one of the keyboard commands below. Indicated below. HideShow Guides in Quark.Here are many of QuarkXPress 7s keyboard shortcuts. Download them as a PDF nicely formatted single.Keyboard Command Guide: Mac OS. Tool selection shortcuts not available when Text Content.Keyboard Command Guide: Windows. Tool selection shortcuts not available when Text Content. Shiftarrow keys.QuarkXPress 10.
The keyboards built into Apple laptops and Apple’s wireless keyboard have fewer keys than Apple’s wired stand-alone keyboard. No separate numeric keypad is available. You can use a group of keys on the right side as a keypad by activating the Num Lock function (press Control+F6). On many Mac keyboards, the sound-control keys, screen-brightness, and other controls are on the function keys.
The large key at the right end of the numeral row on PC keyboards is labeled Backspace and deletes the character to the left Cannot build tests for cake in visual studio for mac. of the insertion point. Long ago, Apple decided to label this key Delete, because that is what it really does. The problem is that PC keyboards have another, regular-sized Delete key in the group above, or sometimes next to, the arrow keys. This Delete key deletes the character to the right of the insertion point. Apple first omitted this key. Later, when Apple switched to connecting by USB for its stand-alone keyboards, the second delete key came back, labeled del or delete. It also has a standard delete symbol on it which looks like a boxy arrow pointing right with an x in it. The big Delete key doesn’t have a symbol on it, though one exists, and it has the same boxy arrow pointing left. The Apple laptops don’t have a second delete key, but you get the right delete function by holding down the function key (fn) when you press the Delete button.
QuarkXPress 5 has tons and tons of shortcuts. You probably won’t memorize most of them, but you’ll no doubt find yourself using one or two all the time. Here are some helpful shortcut keys for view, palette, and object-selection tasks.
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
100% | Command+1 | Ctrl+1 |
Fit in windows | Command+0 | Ctrl+0 |
200% | Option+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+click |
Thumbnails | Shift+F6 | Shift+F6 |
Change view percentage | Control+V | Ctrl+Alt+V |
Force redraw | Option+Command+period | Shift+Esc |
Halt redraw | Command+period | Esc |
Go to page | Command+J | Ctrl+J |
Zoom in | Command+click | Ctrl+spacebar+click |
Zoom out | Option+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+spacebar+click |
Windows submenu | Shift+click title bar | Alt+W (tile, stack) |
Show/hide invisibles | Command+I | Ctrl+I |
Show/hide rulers | Command+R | Ctrl+R |
Show/hide guides | F7 | F7 |
Show/hide baseline grid | Option+F7 | Ctrl+F7 |
Snap to guides | Shift+F7 | Shift+F7 |
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
Show/hide Measurements | F9 | F9 |
Show/hide Tools palette | F8 | F8 |
Show/hide Document Layout palette | F10 | F4 |
Show/hide StyleSheets palette | F11 | F11 |
Show/hide Colors palette | F12 | F12 |
Show/hide Trap Information palette | Option+F12 | Ctrl+F12 |
Show/hide Lists palette | Option+F11 | Ctrl+F11 |
Show/hide Index palette | Option+Command+I | Ctrl+Alt+I |
Show font use | F13 | not available |
Show picture use | Option+F13 | not available |
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
Select all | Command+A | Ctrl+A |
Select item behind | Option+Shift+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+Shift+click another item |
Multiple selection (series) | Shift+click | Shift+click |
Multiple selection (noncontiguous) | Command+click | Ctrl+click |
Apple’s keyboard layouts look very much like standard Windows keyboards. The biggest difference is in the two keys on either side of the spacebar. On a PC, the keys closest to the spacebar are labeled Alt; the next one over has a Windows logo. On a Mac, the keys closest to the spacebar have an icon (Command) that looks like a four-bladed propeller or electric fan. These Command keys both have the same function. The next one over is the Option key.
The Command key is used in almost all keyboard shortcuts. It’s one of the most important things to know about the Mac.
Another key that may not be familiar to PC users is at the upper-right on Apple keyboards. It’s the eject button for the optical drive (that reads and writes CDs and DVDs). You see the same symbol on the eject button on home audio devices. Continuing to the left on stand-alone keyboards, you find a key with a speaker symbol, which turns the system sound on and off. It’s a mute button, in effect. It is followed by two keys that raise and lower the volume.
Applying horizontal or vertical scale. To apply horizontal or vertical scaling to selected text, do one of the following things: Choose Style Horizontal/Vertical Scale, choose Horizontal or Vertical from the Scale drop-down menu, enter a value in the field, and then click OK. Use one of the keyboard commands below. Indicated below. HideShow Guides in Quark.Here are many of QuarkXPress 7s keyboard shortcuts. Download them as a PDF nicely formatted single.Keyboard Command Guide: Mac OS. Tool selection shortcuts not available when Text Content.Keyboard Command Guide: Windows. Tool selection shortcuts not available when Text Content. Shiftarrow keys.QuarkXPress 10.
The keyboards built into Apple laptops and Apple’s wireless keyboard have fewer keys than Apple’s wired stand-alone keyboard. No separate numeric keypad is available. You can use a group of keys on the right side as a keypad by activating the Num Lock function (press Control+F6). On many Mac keyboards, the sound-control keys, screen-brightness, and other controls are on the function keys.
The large key at the right end of the numeral row on PC keyboards is labeled Backspace and deletes the character to the left Cannot build tests for cake in visual studio for mac. of the insertion point. Long ago, Apple decided to label this key Delete, because that is what it really does. The problem is that PC keyboards have another, regular-sized Delete key in the group above, or sometimes next to, the arrow keys. This Delete key deletes the character to the right of the insertion point. Apple first omitted this key. Later, when Apple switched to connecting by USB for its stand-alone keyboards, the second delete key came back, labeled del or delete. It also has a standard delete symbol on it which looks like a boxy arrow pointing right with an x in it. The big Delete key doesn’t have a symbol on it, though one exists, and it has the same boxy arrow pointing left. The Apple laptops don’t have a second delete key, but you get the right delete function by holding down the function key (fn) when you press the Delete button.
QuarkXPress 5 has tons and tons of shortcuts. You probably won’t memorize most of them, but you’ll no doubt find yourself using one or two all the time. Here are some helpful shortcut keys for view, palette, and object-selection tasks.
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
100% | Command+1 | Ctrl+1 |
Fit in windows | Command+0 | Ctrl+0 |
200% | Option+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+click |
Thumbnails | Shift+F6 | Shift+F6 |
Change view percentage | Control+V | Ctrl+Alt+V |
Force redraw | Option+Command+period | Shift+Esc |
Halt redraw | Command+period | Esc |
Go to page | Command+J | Ctrl+J |
Zoom in | Command+click | Ctrl+spacebar+click |
Zoom out | Option+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+spacebar+click |
Windows submenu | Shift+click title bar | Alt+W (tile, stack) |
Show/hide invisibles | Command+I | Ctrl+I |
Show/hide rulers | Command+R | Ctrl+R |
Show/hide guides | F7 | F7 |
Show/hide baseline grid | Option+F7 | Ctrl+F7 |
Snap to guides | Shift+F7 | Shift+F7 |
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
Show/hide Measurements | F9 | F9 |
Show/hide Tools palette | F8 | F8 |
Show/hide Document Layout palette | F10 | F4 |
Show/hide StyleSheets palette | F11 | F11 |
Show/hide Colors palette | F12 | F12 |
Show/hide Trap Information palette | Option+F12 | Ctrl+F12 |
Show/hide Lists palette | Option+F11 | Ctrl+F11 |
Show/hide Index palette | Option+Command+I | Ctrl+Alt+I |
Show font use | F13 | not available |
Show picture use | Option+F13 | not available |
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
Select all | Command+A | Ctrl+A |
Select item behind | Option+Shift+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+Shift+click another item |
Multiple selection (series) | Shift+click | Shift+click |
Multiple selection (noncontiguous) | Command+click | Ctrl+click |
Apple’s keyboard layouts look very much like standard Windows keyboards. The biggest difference is in the two keys on either side of the spacebar. On a PC, the keys closest to the spacebar are labeled Alt; the next one over has a Windows logo. On a Mac, the keys closest to the spacebar have an icon (Command) that looks like a four-bladed propeller or electric fan. These Command keys both have the same function. The next one over is the Option key.
The Command key is used in almost all keyboard shortcuts. It’s one of the most important things to know about the Mac.
Another key that may not be familiar to PC users is at the upper-right on Apple keyboards. It’s the eject button for the optical drive (that reads and writes CDs and DVDs). You see the same symbol on the eject button on home audio devices. Continuing to the left on stand-alone keyboards, you find a key with a speaker symbol, which turns the system sound on and off. It’s a mute button, in effect. It is followed by two keys that raise and lower the volume.
Applying horizontal or vertical scale. To apply horizontal or vertical scaling to selected text, do one of the following things: Choose Style Horizontal/Vertical Scale, choose Horizontal or Vertical from the Scale drop-down menu, enter a value in the field, and then click OK. Use one of the keyboard commands below. Indicated below. HideShow Guides in Quark.Here are many of QuarkXPress 7s keyboard shortcuts. Download them as a PDF nicely formatted single.Keyboard Command Guide: Mac OS. Tool selection shortcuts not available when Text Content.Keyboard Command Guide: Windows. Tool selection shortcuts not available when Text Content. Shiftarrow keys.QuarkXPress 10.
The keyboards built into Apple laptops and Apple’s wireless keyboard have fewer keys than Apple’s wired stand-alone keyboard. No separate numeric keypad is available. You can use a group of keys on the right side as a keypad by activating the Num Lock function (press Control+F6). On many Mac keyboards, the sound-control keys, screen-brightness, and other controls are on the function keys.
The large key at the right end of the numeral row on PC keyboards is labeled Backspace and deletes the character to the left Cannot build tests for cake in visual studio for mac. of the insertion point. Long ago, Apple decided to label this key Delete, because that is what it really does. The problem is that PC keyboards have another, regular-sized Delete key in the group above, or sometimes next to, the arrow keys. This Delete key deletes the character to the right of the insertion point. Apple first omitted this key. Later, when Apple switched to connecting by USB for its stand-alone keyboards, the second delete key came back, labeled del or delete. It also has a standard delete symbol on it which looks like a boxy arrow pointing right with an x in it. The big Delete key doesn’t have a symbol on it, though one exists, and it has the same boxy arrow pointing left. The Apple laptops don’t have a second delete key, but you get the right delete function by holding down the function key (fn) when you press the Delete button.
QuarkXPress 5 has tons and tons of shortcuts. You probably won’t memorize most of them, but you’ll no doubt find yourself using one or two all the time. Here are some helpful shortcut keys for view, palette, and object-selection tasks.
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
100% | Command+1 | Ctrl+1 |
Fit in windows | Command+0 | Ctrl+0 |
200% | Option+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+click |
Thumbnails | Shift+F6 | Shift+F6 |
Change view percentage | Control+V | Ctrl+Alt+V |
Force redraw | Option+Command+period | Shift+Esc |
Halt redraw | Command+period | Esc |
Go to page | Command+J | Ctrl+J |
Zoom in | Command+click | Ctrl+spacebar+click |
Zoom out | Option+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+spacebar+click |
Windows submenu | Shift+click title bar | Alt+W (tile, stack) |
Show/hide invisibles | Command+I | Ctrl+I |
Show/hide rulers | Command+R | Ctrl+R |
Show/hide guides | F7 | F7 |
Show/hide baseline grid | Option+F7 | Ctrl+F7 |
Snap to guides | Shift+F7 | Shift+F7 |
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
Show/hide Measurements | F9 | F9 |
Show/hide Tools palette | F8 | F8 |
Show/hide Document Layout palette | F10 | F4 |
Show/hide StyleSheets palette | F11 | F11 |
Show/hide Colors palette | F12 | F12 |
Show/hide Trap Information palette | Option+F12 | Ctrl+F12 |
Show/hide Lists palette | Option+F11 | Ctrl+F11 |
Show/hide Index palette | Option+Command+I | Ctrl+Alt+I |
Show font use | F13 | not available |
Show picture use | Option+F13 | not available |
Action | Mac | Windows |
---|---|---|
Select all | Command+A | Ctrl+A |
Select item behind | Option+Shift+Command+click | Ctrl+Alt+Shift+click another item |
Multiple selection (series) | Shift+click | Shift+click |
Multiple selection (noncontiguous) | Command+click | Ctrl+click |