Comprehensive list of Windows hotkeys.
F1 / right arrow: Repeats the letters of the last command line, one by one.
F2: Displays a dialog asking user to "enter the char to copy up to" of the last command line
F3: Repeats the last command line
F4: Displays a dialog asking user to "enter the char to delete up to" of the last command
line
F5: Goes back one command line
F6: Enters the traditional CTRL+Z (^z)
F7: Displays a menu with the command line history
F8: Cycles back through previous command lines (beginning with most recent)
F9: Displays a dialog asking user to enter a command number, where 0 is for first command line entered.
Note: The buffer allows a maximum of 50 command lines. After this number is reached, the first line will be replaced in sequence.
Works on Windows 2000 Professional and Server." Maybe on others, as well.
The above is from a link i posted earlier, which has a couple more command prompt gems if you want to surf a little.
@jonny- Nice compilation, quite useful. I hadn't known Win-Tab until reading here.
2) Intuitive. Logical. Versatile. Adaptable. <
Ctrl + CursorKeys: Scroll the tree in any direction without changing the seleced node.In tree pane, if any:
Alt + Minus: Dislay the system menu of an MDI child window. Same as clicking the icon on the menubar (if the child window is maximized).Alt + Space: Display system menu. Same as clicking the icon on the titlebar.
Sometimes:Ctrl + Tab: Cycle through tabs/child windows.
Ctrl + F6: Switch to the next MDI child window. Also to previous with Shift.
Shift while login: Bypass startup folder. Only those applications will be ignored which are in the startup folder, not those started from the registry (Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Run\)Shift while a CD is loading: Bypass AutoPlay.
This is application dependent, most apps that follow the MS guidelines, implement it. Examples:F6: Cycle through screen elements. Testing on this was inconclusive; I'd appreciate someone doing extensive testing on this under various circumstances, and posting the results.
Most editors in split mode (MS Word, TextPad)
MS Html Help
Also it presses a pushbutton if selected.Space: Toggle items such as radio buttons or checkboxes.
Ctrl+Tab (desktop active): cycle thru desktop selection, StartMenu, QuickLaunch, system tray. Shift to reverse, but it will act the same as Shift above.
Tab (in browser/folder): cycle thru AddressBar, left panel (if present), and main panel/selection. varies with application.
F6: similar to above
Ctrl+Shift+Esc also works on Win2000, to invoke Task Manager.
Win+D: is technically, toggle desktop view, using Show_Desktop.scf, while MinimizeAllWindows doesn't minimize dialog boxes (including Properties windows).
minor correction, Ctrl + Arrow Keys: Change focus without changing selection. "Focus" is the object that will be added/removed when pressing Ctrl+Space. This also allows to select multiple items.
minor correction, under Remote Desktop Connection Navigation: PrintScreen captures the entire screen, while Alt+PrtScrn captures the active window.
Hold Shift to highlight any of the following four:
Home (in text editor): move caret to beginning of line.
End (in text editor): move caret to end of line.
Ctrl+Home (in text editor): move caret to beginning of text.
Ctrl+End (in text editor): move caret to end of text.
The following apply to the command prompt:
Alt+Enter: toggle fullScreen mode.
up/down: scroll thru/repeat previous entries
Esc: delete line
And some trivia for MS-DOS editor: in command prompt, type edit, hit Enter. Alt H, then C. Hold the down arrow to scroll to the Window Management Commands. Also, F8 tabs thru multiple open text files.
2) Intuitive. Logical. Versatile. Adaptable. <
Print : captures full screen to clipboard
Alt + Print : captures active window to clipboard
toralf
I use the latest AHK version (1.1.15+)
Please ask questions in forum on ahkscript.org. Why?
For online reference please use these Docs.
Still, it's a great and usefull find!
TIA,
Shift + MWheelUp: Back
Shift + MWheelDown: Forward
As luck would have it, I've got a problem with Windows opening a dialog where I can't move it with the mouse, and I've lost the information on the hotkey combination needed to make the window movable. Does that sound familiar to anyone here?
TIA,
response to June 13 post by Guest:
Alt Space, then m
:idea:
2) Intuitive. Logical. Versatile. Adaptable. <
Matt
Would anyone be interested in my making this available for download? And if so, in what format?
Johnny,
I think it'd be a great idea.
If you'd do in PDF, then it'd look the way you want it to look no matter what. Now that Macs with the new Intel chipset emulate Windows very nicely, those users would be hungry for this information, providing a new audience for you (if you're interested in this kind of notoriety), and they'd have no problem downloading it while in their native OS. This would make your hard work even more valuable.
Marty