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Home>A complete guide to Windows 7 keyboard shortcuts

Windows Secrets Newsletter • Issue 277 • 2011-02-17 • Circulation: over 400,000


Table of contents 
  • Top Story: A complete guide to Windows 7 keyboard shortcuts
  • Lounge Life: Where workers work: data access at home (or not)
  • Wacky Web Week: Jeggings — style trend gone amok
  • LangaList Plus: A new security threat arrives: Evercookies
  • Woody's Windows: Internet Explorer 9 — finally a competitor
  • In the Wild: Windows Secrets PC Security Baseline

 
Top Story

A complete guide to Windows 7 keyboard shortcuts

Becky waring By Becky Waring

One of the best ways to increase your computing productivity doesn’t cost a cent: learn the keyboard shortcuts for your most-used commands.

To help you stop mousing around and become a keyboard maestro, I rounded up the best resources for finding, using, and creating shortcuts.

Lincoln Spector struck a nerve with his Jan. 13 column, “Twenty-six ways to work faster in Windows 7.” Many of those tips involved keyboard shortcuts. After all, almost any time you can use the keyboard instead of the mouse, you work faster. But there are lots more shortcuts where those came from. This article aims to show you where to find the ones that can speed up your workflow. In case you can’t find the shortcuts you need, I’ll show you how to create your own.

You probably already know that you can invoke many menu and dialog-box items via the keyboard by pressing the Control or Alt key plus an underlined letter. For example, pressing Alt + F in most apps opens the File menu; then pressing the underlined letter N opens a new document. You might also know that when you press Alt + A, you apply dialog-box changes.

Direct keyboard shortcuts to menu commands (such as Ctrl + C for Copy) are typically shown next to the command in the menu itself. For a great introduction to using keyboard shortcuts, check out Gizmo’s Dec. 3, 2009, column. For general strategies and more tips, see Scott Dunn’s Feb. 25, 2010, column.

But hundreds of keyboard shortcuts for commands in Windows and widely used apps such as Internet Explorer and Office are not explicitly hinted at in menus and dialog boxes. In other words, you need to actually learn them.

I can hear you groaning. Yes, learning a whole bunch of keyboard commands is not my idea of a fun way to spend a weekend, either, but if you judiciously pick a few, list them in a cheat sheet that you stick on your monitor, and practice them for a week or two, they’ll become second nature.

Top 20 shortcuts for taming your windows

Managing windows is probably one of the most fertile areas for keyboard shortcuts because otherwise, you manipulate them solely with the mouse. Here’s my top-20 list of must-know shortcuts for taming your windows; you’ll never have to move your hands from the keyboard. For completeness, I’ve included many keyboard shortcuts you might already be familiar with; skip down the list to see the ones you don’t know.

Switch between open windows
Alt + Tab
Minimize/restore all but the active window
Windows key + Home
Minimize all windows
Windows key + M
Maximize window
Windows key + up-arrow
Minimize/restore window
Windows key + down-arrow
Make all windows transparent so you can see the desktop
Windows key + spacebar
Dock window to left or right half of screen
Windows key + left- or right-arrow
Zoom in/out
  (In the default view, you must zoom in before zooming out.)
Windows key + plus/minus sign
Lock screen
Windows key + L
Open Run dialog
Windows key + R
Open Search box
Windows key + F
Open Windows Explorer to computer
Windows key + E
Expand Folders view in Win Explorer to show where you are
Control + Shift + E
Go up a level in Windows Explorer
Alt + up-arrow
Choose display mode/switch monitors
  (Especially useful for presenters or dual-monitor users)
Windows key + P
Launch apps pinned to the Taskbar
  (1 is the left-most app; Windows Key+T cycles through all apps.)
Windows key + (number 1-9)
Cycle through Gadgets
Windows key + G
Rotate a picture clockwise
  (Or use comma for counterclockwise)
Control + period

Use Control-click to select the pictures in a folder you need to rotate, then rotate them all at once.

Turn Sticky Keys on and off
Press Shift five times

Although keyboard shortcuts can be real time-savers, sometimes it’s hard to press multiple keys at once, (especially while you’re eating a sandwich or holding your phone in one hand). The Windows Sticky Keys feature lets you press one key at a time as you enter a shortcut. You can turn on Sticky Keys permanently by using the Control Panel’s Ease of Access Center options.

Turn Mouse Keys on and off
Left-Alt + left-Shift + Num Lock

The Windows Mouse Keys feature is a really useful shortcut that lets you control the cursor with the arrow keys on your numeric keypad. Like Sticky Keys, it can be turned on permanently in the Control Panel’s Ease of Access Center, but you can also invoke it at any time by pressing this key combination. This gesture turns you into a true keyboard jockey.

Note that both Sticky Keys and Mouse Keys display a warning message when you turn them on and off. You can disable the warning boxes in the Control Panel’s Ease of Access Center by choosing Set up Mouse Keys or Set up Sticky Keys. This list is just a sample of the dozens of shortcuts available. For a full accounting of Windows 7 interface shortcuts, see Microsoft’s Windows 7 Help & How-to site.

Other programs and lots more shortcuts

Although the global Windows 7 shortcuts are the headliners, you will probably save the most time by getting to know the keyboard shortcuts in frequently used applications such as your Web browser, e-mail program, and word processor.

Here are links to handy keyboard shortcut reference guides for many popular apps, along with my favorite shortcut discoveries made researching this article:
  • Internet Explorer. (shortcuts) Try Control + Shift + P to open an InPrivate browsing window; try Control + E to go to the Search box.

  • Firefox. (shortcuts) Select the exact tab you want with Control + 1 to 8. Control + 9 chooses the last tab.

  • Chrome. (shortcuts) Press Alt and click a link to download its target, such as a picture or PDF file.

  • Office 2010. (shortcuts) Use the keyboard to work the ribbon interface in all Office programs. This is a huge timesaver. Also, create your own shortcuts by first clicking the File tab to open Backstage view. Then choose Options/Customize Ribbon/Keyboard, then Shortcuts/Customize to enter your own key combinations or to change existing ones, as shown in Figure 1.

    Office 2010 shortcuts
    Figure 1. The keyboard customization tool in Office 2010.

  • Word 2010. (shortcuts) Press Shift + F7 to open the Thesaurus. My new favorite function key! Lots of great formatting, selection, and navigation shortcuts here, too.

  • Excel 2010. (shortcuts) Control + Shift + : enters the current time. Control + Shift + & adds a border around the selected cells.

  • OneNote 2010. (shortcuts) I’ve fallen in love with the ability to move the current paragraph or selected paragraphs up or down in a document by pressing Alt + Shift + up- or down-arrow.

  • Outlook 2010. (shortcuts) Enter Control + Shift + I to switch to your Inbox (or Control + Shift + O to move to your Outbox).

  • Thunderbird. (shortcuts) Press F8 to toggle the message pane on and off; press T to jump to the next unread thread.

  • Windows Media Player 12. (shortcuts) Alt + Enter toggles full-screen video.

  • Adobe Photoshop CS5. (shortcuts) Adobe is kind enough to let you use theirs or build your own shortcuts right in the program.
With a little Googling, you can find more lists of shortcuts for most any program you use regularly.

Better than shortcuts: Windows Aero tricks

First introduced in Windows Vista, the Windows Aero interface comes of age in Windows 7 and is part of all editions except Starter and Home Basic. Critically, most Windows 7 PCs actually have the horsepower to run Aero smoothly (many Vista users were chagrined to learn their computer either wouldn’t support Aero or ran sluggishly), and new usability features make Aero much more than a pretty face.

You’re probably already familiar with many of the Windows 7 interface effects, especially Aero Peek, but others, like Shake, are relatively obscure. If you haven’t discovered these tricks, you’re really missing out.

Yes, they’re mouse shortcuts rather than keyboard shortcuts (and most have keyboard equivalents), but give them a try. Sometimes you have your hand on the mouse or trackpad already, which makes these mouse tricks faster than keyboard combinations to access. And they’re much more fun.
  • Peek. Hovering over a program icon in the taskbar gives you a thumbnail preview of open windows for that program.

  • Shake. Click and hold your main window on the screen, and then “shake” it with your mouse to minimize or restore all other windows. This shortcut lets you focus on the task at hand. It works like the Windows key + Home combination.

  • Flip 3D. This trick is way cooler than Alt+Tab: holding down the Windows key while repeatedly pressing Tab visually flips you through your open windows. (See Figure 2.) To flip backward, hold down the Shift key, too.

  • Snap. Drag the title bar of a window to the top of the screen to maximize, or drag it to the right or left edge of the screen until an outline of the window appears to make it fill the right or left half of the screen. The latter maneuver makes it a snap to arrange two windows side by side. This is the mouse equivalent of Windows key + left- or right-arrow.
Aero flip 3d effect
Figure 2. Windows Aero Flip 3D lets you visually sift through open windows.

If Aero effects are not presently working on your Windows 7 installation (or only partially working), you may not have the horsepower to run the full Aero interface. Or you may need to enable Aero effects because they depend on your Windows Experience Index.

To enable Aero (or check your ability to run it), go to Control Panel/System & Security/System and run or refresh the Experience Index. Then choose Advanced system settings/Advanced/Performance settings to see what Aero effects are enabled for your system.

If not all effects are enabled, click Custom and check the additional effects you want to use. If these effects perform poorly, you can always go to the same settings to disable them.

How to play God and create program shortcuts

If you spend any time following Windows news, you’ve probably read one or more of the recent stories on the Web about the so-called GodMode, the Windows 7 tweak du jour. This is nothing more than a searchable/clickable list (see Figure 3) of all system and Control Panel tasks, produced when you create a special folder. (Ed Bott describes similar shortcuts in one of his blogs.)

GodMode has no extra powers or capabilities. But it does let you easily assign keyboard shortcuts to any task in the list, which is undeniably cool.

God mode folder
Figure 3. The GodMode folder contains a searchable list of system tasks.

So you could create keyboard commands for tasks such as adjusting your monitor resolution, showing hidden files and folders, blocking or allowing Internet Explorer pop-ups, or viewing network connections.

To do so, simply create a folder on your desktop with a name and a globally unique identifier (GUID) number, such as GodMode.{ED7BA470-8E54-465E-825C-99712043E01C}. (Warning: Creating a GodMode folder reportedly crashes 64-bit Vista systems. Use at your own risk in any OS but Windows 7.)

Next, open the folder and right-click the setting for which you want to make a shortcut. Finally, right-click the newly created shortcut, choose Properties/Shortcut, and enter your choice of key sequences to invoke it. Press Apply and close the dialog box.

When you create your own sequences, try to stay away from anything already used by Windows or by your main programs. The Control + Shift + Function key territory is relatively uncharted.

Note that you can use this last trick to create keyboard shortcuts for any programs or documents you use frequently, not just the GodMode tasks. Simply right-click the program name in the Start menu and choose Properties/Shortcut/Shortcut key. Do the same for documents by first creating a clickable shortcut and then a keyboard shortcut.

Using KeyText and AutoHotKey for shortcuts

Want even more shortcuts? Start rolling your own with a keyboard macro utility. These apps let you create standard shortcuts not only for menu items but also for sequences of actions, including tasks such as entering text and clicking buttons in a dialog box.

Macro utilities for Windows 7 are not as plentiful as they used to be for XP. (And my all-time favorite, QuicKeys, has not been updated for Vista or Windows 7.) But I found a couple that do the job for little or no money.

The first is MJMSoft’s KeyText 3 (U.S. $29.95, info page). KeyText (see Figure 4) is an amazingly versatile program that can automate tasks such as opening your e-mail program and creating a new message using an e-mail address you’ve selected in another program.

It even supports regular expressions and if/then/else logic, so you can conduct search-and-replace operations or batch-file renaming, as well as perform different actions that depend on the result of a search.

KeyText 3 menu
Figure 4. KeyText 3′s macro menu can be invoked from the system tray or via a hotkey. You can also assign direct hotkeys to any item.

Learning how to harness all this power requires a little work, but you can use both the contextual help and a very good PDF manual (albeit one not updated since Vista). You’ll have no trouble learning simple tasks such as assigning trigger text to an action. A trial version of this software is available.

AutoHotKey (info page) is another versatile option for creating your own shortcuts. This free and open-source utility requires significantly more effort to learn and use than KeyText, but it has a very active community forum where you can get help quickly; it also has good documentation.

AutoHotKey is basically a macro scripting language that requires you to write simple programs for your shortcuts using a text editor like NotePad. After saving your shortcuts with the .ahk extension, you can then run them in the background by double-clicking them, or you can set them as startup items.

AutoHotKey’s command list (page) is quite versatile, and programmers are likely take to it in a flash. The rest of us can get by with the included AutoScriptWriter macro recording utility, which — as advertised — “watches where you type and what you click, and keeps track of which window is active.”

KeyText is considerably easier to use than AutoHotKey, and both powerfully fulfill almost every Windows 7 automation need. Even so, there’s room for a simpler utility with a great graphical user interface, such as the old QuicKeys. If you know of one, please tell us in the Lounge. In the meantime, try out some of the preprogrammed suggestions above.

Feedback welcome: Have a question or comment about this story? Post your thoughts, praises, or constructive criticisms in the WS Columns forum.

Becky Waring is the former editor of NewMedia Magazine and has written for PC World, Macworld, Wired, Upside Magazine, Technology Review, CNET, and many other outlets.

 
Lounge Life

Where workers work: data access at home (or not)

By Kathleen Atkins

Lately, Lounge members have been pondering data security: can (or should) one accord greater or lesser degrees of trust to workers, depending on where they’re doing their jobs any given day.

Lounge member Neil asks whether it’s possible to configure Terminal Services in Small Business Server 2008 to differentiate network services, giving users broader access to data at the office than at home.

A technical question leads to technical and philosophical answers — and to more questions. More»

The following links are this week’s most interesting Lounge threads, including several new questions that you may be able to provide responses to:

Office Applications
General Productivity 
File properties not showing in ToolTip

Word Processing 
Can’t change or save Word 2010 docs: Read Only
☼
Spreadsheets 
Show parts per million in Excel
☼
Databases 
Code disappears in Office Access 2007

Visual Basic for Apps 
Repurpose FileNew for Word 2010

Microsoft Outlook 
Clicking link in mail leads to messed-up Firefox

Non-Outlook E-mail 
Want Windows Live Mail on two machines
☼
Windows
General Windows 
What happened to multitasking? Large copy/paste
☼
Windows 7
I need permission to delete a .jpg file!
Win7 64-bit locks up after idle
Scheduling automatic updates for download limits


☼
Windows Vista 
Different shortcuts on start-up; no IconCache

Windows XP 
A question about backup and reinstallation
☼
Windows Servers 
Remote workers access rights — SBS 2008
☼
Internet/Connectivity
Internet Explorer 
100% processor use with IE 7 and 8

Third-Party Browsers 
Want to stop those ads linked to text in Firefox
☼
Networking
Unidentified public network message in Win 7

Other Technologies
Security & Backups 
Spybot S&D can’t purge FunWebProducts

Other Applications 
Snapfish PictureMover

Lounge Matters 
Want a pop-up showing first lines of first post?

Light Relief
Scuttlebutt
Need a translation
☼

☼ starred posts — particularly useful

If you’re not already a Lounge member, use the quick registration form to sign up for free. The ability to post comments and take advantage of other Lounge features is available only to registered members.

If you’re already registered, you can jump right in to today’s discussions in the Lounge.

The Lounge Life column is a digest of the best of the WS Lounge discussion board. Kathleen Atkins is associate editor of Windows Secrets.

 
Wacky Web Week

Jeggings — style trend gone amok

Jeggings style trend gone amok By Revia Romberg

Clothing trends come and go like the wind. We can become so enamored with new style that when we look at older photos, we’re horrified by what we wore just a year ago. But our fashion situation can get worse.

Take skinny jeans, for example. The skinnier the better, right? Taking that to its illogical conclusion, skinny jeans have led us to jeggings — leggings dyed to look like jeans. Watch this video to find out where fashion fusions just might take us. Play the video

See more funny videos and funny pictures at CollegeHumor.

 
LangaList Plus

A new security threat arrives: Evercookies

Fred langa By Fred Langa

The author of the Samy worm has released a new tool for creating permanent cookies that evade classic cookie-management tools.

Evercookies hide themselves in eight different places, and they can regenerate themselves if you delete them.


Reader wants a way to block Evercookies

Rome Arnold was alarmed to learn of a new kind of cookie.
  • “Is it correct that private browsing does not block the placement of Evercookies (or permanent cookies) on your computer, no matter whether you are using Firefox, Chrome, IE, or Safari?

    “From what I read on the Net, these Evercookies are very difficult to clean because they are placed in multiple locations and can self-regenerate.”

Evercookies are indeed real, but they can be managed.

Before we dig in, let’s define some terms. An Evercookie isn’t really a cookie. A real Web-browser cookie is a small text file, intrinsically no more dangerous than any other text file on your PC. Cookies aren’t programs and aren’t active in any way. They can’t snoop, self-replicate, phone home, or do any other damaging deed.

True cookies are inert text repositories, but — again, just like any other file on your PC — the data they contain can be mined or otherwise subverted. That’s why every major browser contains mechanisms for managing or blocking unwanted cookies. It takes some really unusual circumstances for a normal cookie to be a threat nowadays.

But some cookies aren’t normal. Software authors have long sought ways to create deletion-proof cookies or otherwise work around the limitations of standard cookies.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

Already a paid subscriber? Click here to login.


 
Woody's Windows

Internet Explorer 9 — finally a competitor

Woody leonhard By Woody Leonhard

Microsoft posted the Internet Explorer 9 release candidate last week, and it’s well worth a look.

With Firefox 4 very close to launch and Google Chrome in a perpetual update cycle, lots of new browser goodies are on the horizon — and surprisingly, IE 9 contains a few of these morsels.


Internet Explorer’s twisted road to … success?

When I wrote about the public beta version of Internet Explorer 9 in the September 23, 2010, Top Story, I noted that although it looked promising, IE 9 still had lots of wrinkles. But after working with the near-final product, I believe Internet Explorer has finally come of age.

To understand Microsoft’s remarkable achievement with IE 9, you have to look back at IE’s somewhat sordid history. IE 6 appeared in 2001 and remained virtually untouched for five years. It developed a well-deserved reputation as the single greatest security risk ever to hit Windows. Even so, the browser became the mainstay on millions of PCs. A decade later, IE 6 has a market share that still hovers above 10%.

IE 7 gave new meaning to the term “me-too software,” having borrowed essentially all of its new features from competitors. Its sole redeeming social grace? It didn’t have as many gaping security holes as IE 6.

IE 8, which hit two years ago, scored very low on the Acid3 (Wiki page) compatibility test page. It introduced several new capabilities touted as major improvements — such as Accelerators, which lets you run specific Web applications without pointing the browser at them, and Web Slices, which lets you keep track of changing portions of a webpage without actually going to the webpage.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

Already a paid subscriber? Click here to login.


 
In the Wild, Security Baseline

Windows Secrets PC Security Baseline

Robert vamosi By Robert Vamosi

You wouldn’t drive your car at night without at least buckling up and turning on the headlights, so why would you surf the Web without using basic safety procedures?

Our Windows Secrets Security Baseline is a simple summary of the products and services that give PC users a minimum safe PC configuration.


The minimum security tools every PC needs

The minimum security configuration for all PCs includes a hardware firewall, anti-malware software, a secure Web browser, and a process for frequently updating applications.

Notebooks present a bigger security challenge. When you’re away from home, you have no control over what hardware firewall your laptop may — or may not — be connected to. So you should be especially vigilant that the software firewall running on your notebook is fully enabled.

Windows Secrets does not have a test lab and doesn’t run its own security tests. Instead, we have reviewed the data available on various security sites and publications that do test products, and we’ve summarized that information here.

Hardware firewalls — the first line of defense

A router is the gateway that gives networked PCs access to the Internet. Almost all routers used in small businesses and homes have a hardware-based firewall plus sundry other security features. A router can, for example, accept connections only from networked devices you’ve placed on its Media Access Control (MAC) address list. Using your router’s administrator controls, make sure you change its admin name and password from the default settings. (In an earlier column, I discussed how easy it is for someone to acquire a specific router’s default admin password.)

If you’re using wireless devices such as a notebook, ensure that they’re protected with either WA or WPA2 encryption.

This article is part of our paid content. Subscribe.

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YOUR SUBSCRIPTION

The Windows Secrets Newsletter is published weekly on the 1st through 4th Thursdays of each month, plus occasional news updates. We skip an issue on the 5th Thursday of any month, the week of Thanksgiving, and the last two weeks of August and December. Windows Secrets is a continuation of four merged publications: Brian's Buzz on Windows and Woody's Windows Watch in 2004, the LangaList in 2006, and the Support Alert Newsletter in 2008.

Publisher: WindowsSecrets.com, 1218 Third Ave., Suite 1515, Seattle, WA 98101 USA. Vendors, please send no unsolicited packages to this address (readers' letters are fine).

Editor in chief: Tracey Capen. Senior editors: Fred Langa, Woody Leonhard. Copyeditor: Roberta Scholz. Program director: Tony Johnston. Contributing editors: Yardena Arar, Susan Bradley, Scott Dunn, Michael Lasky, Scott Mace, Ryan Russell, Lincoln Spector, Robert Vamosi, Becky Waring. Product manager: Andy Boyd. Advertising director: Eric Gilley.

Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, Support Alert, LangaList, LangaList Plus, WinFind, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of WindowsSecrets.com. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.

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Trademarks: Microsoft and Windows are registered trademarks of Microsoft Corporation. The Windows Secrets series of books is published by Wiley Publishing Inc. The Windows Secrets Newsletter, WindowsSecrets.com, WinFind, Windows Gizmos, Security Baseline, Patch Watch, Perimeter Scan, Wacky Web Week, the Logo Design (W, S or road, and Star), and the slogan Everything Microsoft Forgot to Mention all are trademarks and service marks of iNET Interactive. All other marks are the trademarks or service marks of their respective owners.
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