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#1
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| MacBook and "right-click" I just received a message from Apple in which they mention that you can access the built in dictionary by doing a "right-click". Only problem is that since I am new to this operating system I do not know how to do a "right-click". Can anyone help me? I have a MacBook running OS 10.5.2. TIA |
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#2
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| The standard method is to press the "ctrl" key while clicking the trackpad button. If you have your Trackpad Preferences set, you can also get a right-click by pressing 2 fingers on the trackpad while clicking the button. jb.
__________________ ROFL: (Rolling on the floor laughing.) Typically used by people who are too lazy to press the rest of the keys on their keyboard needed to communicate in English. |
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#3
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| Thank you. When I first bought the laptop, I read something about "right-clicking" but since I had no need for it I did not pursue it. Now that I saw that I needed it to access the dictionary I figured I would look into it. Thanks again. |
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#4
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| More fun Put the mouse over a word, hold down Option+Control + D and you'll get a little definition box for the word. Keep holding the keys down and move the mouse and the box will follow you around from word to word. (Only works in Cocoa Apps like Safari, TextEdit and so on) |
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#5
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| I answer this for Mac Books & MacBook Pros in the other thread! Just navigate to System Preferences->KeyBoard & Mouse then select the tab TrackPad. There you can enable two finger gestures to do right click and other things to it can do. To easy!
__________________ PowerMac G5 Dual 1.8(Rev A.), , 7 Gig RAM, Pioneer DVR-110, ATI X800XT, OS X 10.4.11 & 10.5.4, 23'' HD LCD Mac Book Pro Core 2 Duo 2.16Mhz, SuperDrive, ATI X1600, 2GB RAM, OS X 10.5.4 Tibook 400Mhz, DVD drive, 1024 RAM, ATI Rage, OS X 10.4.7 1TB Time Capsule 5g iPod 30Gig White |
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#6
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| You can also run Dictionary. It's an application in /Applications. To get to it or any other application, double-click your hard drive icon on the Desktop (or in any Finder window) and double-click Applications. I always drag the Applications folder to my Dock (strip at bottom of screen). Easy to get to what I want. Let us know if you have any other questions. Have fun! Doug
__________________ "Just as some newborn race of superintelligent robots are about to consume all humanity, our dear old species will likely be saved by a Windows crash. The poor robots will linger pathetically, begging us to reboot them, even though they'll know it would do no good." - Anonymous |