Sometimes, may be for the purpose of taking screenshots, you want to
place program windows at specific locations on your desktop. The mouse
can help.
A quick tip. If you want to position windows more accurately on your desktop, you should use the arrow keys on the keyboard instead of the mouse. Here’s how.
While the program window that you want to move is in the foreground, press Alt + Spacebar to open the menu and then hit the “M” key. Now use the arrow keys to move that window around on the desktop. The window will move by 11 pixels in the direction of the arrow key per click.
You can then hit the Enter key to place the window at the new position or hit the Escape key to return the window to its previous location.
This shortcut has been around since XP and is especially handy during screencasting when you have to align windows perfectly inside the limited recording area.
A quick tip. If you want to position windows more accurately on your desktop, you should use the arrow keys on the keyboard instead of the mouse. Here’s how.
While the program window that you want to move is in the foreground, press Alt + Spacebar to open the menu and then hit the “M” key. Now use the arrow keys to move that window around on the desktop. The window will move by 11 pixels in the direction of the arrow key per click.
You can then hit the Enter key to place the window at the new position or hit the Escape key to return the window to its previous location.
This shortcut has been around since XP and is especially handy during screencasting when you have to align windows perfectly inside the limited recording area.
0 comments:
Post a Comment