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  2. Caret navigation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caret_navigation

    In this text navigation mode the ‘cursor’, often depicted as a blinking vertical line, appears within the text on-screen. The user can then navigate throughout the text by using the arrow navigation keys to cause the cursor to move; typically changing the cursor's location in increments of character position horizontally and of text line vertically.

  3. Help:Displaying a formula - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Help:Displaying_a_formula

    The visual editor shows a button that allows to choose one of three offered modes to display a formula. There are three methods for displaying formulas in Wikipedia: raw HTML, HTML with math templates (abbreviated here as {}), and a subset of LaTeX implemented with the HTML markup < math ></ math > (referred to as LaTeX in this article

  4. Scroll Lock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll_Lock

    In its original design, Scroll Lock was intended to modify the behavior of the arrow keys. When the Scroll Lock mode is on, the arrow keys scroll the contents of a text window instead of moving the cursor. [1] [2] In this usage, Scroll Lock is a toggling lock key like Num Lock or Caps Lock, which have a state that persists after the key is ...

  5. Microsoft Office 2007 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Microsoft_Office_2007

    Data Bars show as a gradient bar in the background of a cell the contribution of the cell value in the group. Column titles can optionally show options to control the layout of the column. Multithreaded calculation of formulae, to speed up large calculations, especially on multi-core/multi-processor systems.

  6. Mouse button - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mouse_button

    A mouse button is an electric switch on a computer mouse which can be pressed (“clicked”) to select or interact with an element of a graphical user interface. Mouse buttons are most commonly implemented as miniature snap-action switches (micro switches). The three-button scrollmouse has become the most commonly available design.

  7. Scrolling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scrolling

    Scrolling may take place in discrete increments (perhaps one or a few lines of text at a time), or continuously (smooth scrolling). Frame rate is the speed at which an entire image is redisplayed. It is related to scrolling in that changes to text and image position can only happen as often as the image can be redisplayed.

  8. Typesetting - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Typesetting

    Computers excel at automatically typesetting and correcting documents. [7] Character-by-character, computer-aided phototypesetting was, in turn, rapidly rendered obsolete in the 1980s by fully digital systems employing a raster image processor to render an entire page to a single high-resolution digital image , now known as imagesetting.

  9. Scroll wheel - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scroll_wheel

    The scroll wheel on a mouse has been invented multiple times by different people unaware of the others' work. Other scrolling controls on a mouse, and the use of a wheel for scrolling both precede the combination of wheel and mouse. The earliest known example of the former is the Mighty Mouse prototype developed jointly by NTT, Japan and ETH Zürich, Switzer