Working with Multiple windows 7
The capability to run multiple programs at the same time is
called “Multitasking”. This makes working with your computer more like you
would actually work, allowing you to switch easily between tasks without having
to put one away before beginning the other. On the Start menu click “Computer”
and then “Help and Support”. You can see that each program is displayed in its
own window.
Notice the “Document1” icon on the desktop. This indicates
that clicking this link will open the associated item on your computer, in this
case, the Microsoft Word document named “Document1”. Double-click on it.
A new window opens on the desktop and the taskbar displays
an additional button for this open window. There are now three programs running
at the same time, “Windows Help and Support”, “Computer” and “Document1”. As
more windows are opened, the taskbar buttons resize themselves automatically to
fit in the taskbar.
The “Document1” window is the active window, that is, the
window currently in use. You can tell it is the active window because the
taskbar button and title bar appear dark whereas those of the inactive windows
are dimmed. Multiple windows can be open on the desktop at once, but only one
window is active at a time. When a new
window is opened, it appears in the size in which it was last used and at any
location on the desktop. The newly opened window is automatically the active
window and appears on top of other open windows on the desktop.
Each running program has a corresponding button on the
taskbar. To switch to a specific program, just click its taskbar button. The
window in which the program is running appears in front of the other windows.
This is now the “active” window.
If the taskbar becomes too crowded with buttons, then the
buttons for the same program become grouped into a single button. Click the
button to see a menu of the items in the group, then select an item to make it
the active window.
You can cycle through all open windows and the desktop by
holding down the “Alt” key and repeatedly pressing the “Tab” key. Release the
“Alt” key to show the selected window.
Frame:7 Using Windows Flip 3D: This feature allows you to
flip through a cascading stack of your open windows. While holding down the
Windows logo key, press the “Tab” key repeatedly or rotate the mouse wheel to
cycle through open windows. Release the Windows logo key to display the window
at the front. Alternatively, click any part of a window in the stack to display
that window. You may also click on the “Switch between windows” icon on the
taskbar to enable the “Windows Flip 3D” feature.
This feature allows you to flip through a cascading stack of
your open windows. While holding down the Windows logo key, press the “Tab” key
repeatedly or rotate the mouse wheel to cycle through open windows. Release the
Windows logo key to display the window at the front. Alternatively, click any
part of a window in the stack to display that window. You may also click on the
“Switch between windows” icon on the taskbar to enable the “Windows Flip 3D”
feature.
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