- Terminal 1 0 1 – Your Terminal Shortcut Word 2016
- Terminal 1 0 1 – Your Terminal Shortcut Word 2013
- Terminal 1 0 1 – Your Terminal Shortcut Words
1.3.1 Launch FXlite client terminal Click on shortcut FXlite For MT4 to start client terminal with FX lite plugin. Now you can login with existing account provided by your broker company, or register new demo account if broker allow to do this via terminal. Microsoft announced today at the Microsoft Build 2020 conference that they are now rolling out the Windows Terminal 1.0 console application with a long list of new features and improvements.
The mouse can be used to select (copy), and extend-select text, paste text from other terminals or applications, and also bring up control menus, as well as select (and move) other GUI components.
Note that some text applications may take complete control of the mouse. Multi Gnome Terminal's mouse handling features are not available in such cases.
8.1. Selection
The following assumes a standard three-button mouse that has not been made left-handed via the control center. Left-handed mice will of course work, but with the right button instead of the left one, and so on.
The LeftMouse button can be used to initiate a selection. If the mouse button is held down and dragged, then characters, words and lines are selected individually.
If you drag past the boundaries of the Window, the screen and selection will scroll to keep up. So, for instance, you can select into the non-visible part of the scrollback buffer, by dragging the mouse past the upper Window border and scrolling as the selection is extended. |
If the LeftMouse button is double-clicked, then the selection will be by word-characters. Hold the mouse button down on the second click to drag the mouse and enlarge the selection. The word-characters are defined in the General options tab of Preferences dialog-box.
Finally, if the LeftMouse button is triple-clicked and held, whole lines are selected as you drag the mouse up and down.
The RightMouse button can be used to extend the selection. Simply scroll to where you wish to extend the selection to, and click the RightMouse button in the desired place. Again, single, double and triple clicks will result in by-character, by-word, or by-line selection.
For all cases, releasing the mouse button automatically copies the selected text into the clipboard, so that it may be pasted to other applications. Note that any screen output will clear the highlighting of the selection, but it will still be kept on the X clipboard.
If there is no URL match on screen beneath the pointer (see below), CTRL-MiddleMouse will reset the X selection mode.
8.2. Pasting text
If the middle mouse button is pressed, then the current selection is pasted into the Window. This can be used to transfer text from other applications, as well as from other locations within the same terminal Window.
If you only have a two-button mouse, then your X server probably has a method of emulating the middle mouse button. The most common method is to emulate the middle mouse button by simultaneous pressing of left and right mouse buttons. Refer to your X server documentation for further information.
SHIFT-INSERT can be used as a keyboard shortcut for pasting.
8.3. Wheel mouse
If you have a wheel mouse (which sends mouse button 4 and mouse button 5 events), then you can use the wheel to scroll up and down through the scrollback buffer. If properly configured for X, no additional configuration should be required.
8.4. Pop-up Control Menu
The mouse pointer can also be used to bring up the Pop-up menus, which can be used to open new Multi Gnome Terminal Windows, open new Tabs and to access many other Multi Gnome Terminal features. There are two such menus: the New Term menu which is accessed with CTRL-LeftMouse (see the New Term Section.). And the control Pop-up menu, accessed with CTRL-RightMouse (see the Pop-up Menu Section for more details).
8.5. Launching URL's
Gnome Terminal instituted the concept of 'live URLs'. These are URLs of various types that appear on the terminal window as text and that the application is able to discern just what they are, e.g. a HTTP style URL to denote a WWW document. This added quite a bit of additional functionality to the plain old terminal interface. Now, actions could be taken based on whatever appears as raw text in the window.
Multi Gnome Terminal, like Gnome Terminal, can be used to select URL's (Uniform Resource Locators; such as http://www.gnome.org, or file:///usr/share/doc/mgt/index.html, or [email protected]) from the text displayed in the terminal Window, simply by moving the mouse over the URL text. The URL will be emphasized, by being redrawn with an underscore, and the mouse pointer will change to a pointing hand to let you know it is 'live'.
Multi Gnome Terminal also now understands email addresses and file path names, in addition to traditional http:// type URLs. Invoking the control-menu while over a highlighted URL will add a new option to load that URL into an appropriate application, for instance a mail client if the URL represents an email address. The menu selection text will reflect what the appropriate client should be.
Terminal 1 0 1 – Your Terminal Shortcut Word 2016
CTRL-MiddleMouse is a shortcut to launching the URL with the appropriate application immediately.
Multi Gnome Terminal includes a script, mgt-helper which can extend this feature so that text based applications can be launched in their own Tabs or Windows. See the mgt-helper Section for more information on what this script can do in conjunction with Multi Gnome Terminal to greatly extend and customize URL handling.
8.6. Drag and Drop
Drag and drop can be used for a number of operations within the terminal.
If files are dragged into the terminal, then their full filename is pasted into the Window. URL's can also be dropped in this manner.
A color can be dragged from another gnome application, or from the color selector into the display. If it lands on a character, it sets the foreground color, otherwise it sets the background color. Refer to the TabColors configuration section.
Terminal User Guide
Terminal 1 0 1 – Your Terminal Shortcut Word 2013
Use these shortcuts to save time when using Terminal.
Work with Terminal windows and tabs
Action | Shortcut |
---|---|
New window | Command-N |
New window with same command | Control-Command-N |
New tab | Command-T |
New tab with same command | Control-Command-T |
Show or hide tab bar | Shift-Command-T |
Show all tabs or exit tab overview | Shift-Command-Backslash () |
New command | Shift-Command-N |
New remote connection | Shift-Command-K |
Show or hide Inspector | Command-I |
Edit title | Shift-Command-I |
Edit background color | Option-Command-I |
Make fonts bigger | Command-Plus (+) |
Make fonts smaller | Command-Minus (–) |
Next window | Command-Grave Accent (`) |
Previous window | Command-Shift-Tilde (~) |
Next Tab | Control-Tab |
Previous Tab | Control-Shift-Tab |
Split window into two panes | Command-D |
Close split pane | Shift-Command-D |
Close tab | Command-W |
Close window | Shift-Command-W |
Close other tabs | Option-Command-W |
Close all | Option-Shift-Command-W |
Scroll to top | Command-Home |
Scroll to bottom | Command-End |
Page up | Command-Page Up |
Page down | Command-Page Down |
Line up | Option-Command-Page Up |
Line down | Option-Command-Page Down |
Edit a command line
Action | Shortcut |
---|---|
Reposition the insertion point | Press and hold the Option key while moving the pointer to a new insertion point. |
Move the insertion point to the beginning of the line | Control-A |
Move the insertion point to the end of the line | Control-E |
Move the insertion point forward one character | Right Arrow |
Move the insertion point backward one character | Left Arrow |
Move the insertion point forward one word | Option-Right Arrow |
Move the insertion point backward one word | Option-Left Arrow |
Delete to the beginning of the line | Control-U |
Delete to the end of the line | Control-K |
Delete forward to the end of the word | Option-D (available when Use Option as Meta key is selected) |
Delete backward to the beginning of the word | Control-W |
Delete one character | Delete |
Forward-delete one character | Forward Delete (or use Fn-Delete) |
Transpose two characters | Control-T |
Select and find text in a Terminal window
Action | Shortcut |
---|---|
Select a complete file path | Press and hold the Shift and Command keys and double-click the path |
Select a complete line of text | Triple-click the line |
Select a word | Double-click the word |
Select a URL | Press and hold the Shift and Command keys and double-click the URL |
Select a rectangular block | Press and hold the Option key and drag to select text |
Cut | Command-X |
Copy | Command-C |
Copy without background color | Control-Shift-Command-C |
Copy plain text | Option-Shift-Command-C |
Paste | Command-V |
Paste the selection | Shift-Command-V |
Paste escaped text | Control-Command-V |
Paste escaped selection | Control-Shift-Command-V |
Find | Command-F |
Find next Disk diag 1 3 download free. | Command-G |
Find previous | Command-Shift-G |
Find using the selected text | Command-E |
Jump to the selected text | Command-J |
Select all | Command-A |
Open the character viewer | Control-Command-Space |
Work with marks and bookmarks
Action | Shortcut |
---|---|
Mark | Command-U |
Mark as bookmark | Option-Command-U |
Unmark | Shift-Command-U |
Mark line and send return | Command-Return |
Send return without marking | Shift-Command-Return |
Insert bookmark | Shift-Command-M |
Insert bookmark with name | Option-Shift-Command-M |
Jump to previous mark | Command-Up Arrow |
Jump to next mark | Command-Down Arrow |
Jump to previous bookmark | Option-Command-Up Arrow |
Jump to next bookmark | Option-Command-Down Arrow |
Clear to previous mark | Command-L |
Clear to previous bookmark | Option-Command-L |
Clear to start | Command-K |
Select between marks | Shift-Command-A |
Other shortcuts
Action | Shortcut |
---|---|
Enter or exit full screen | Control-Command-F |
Show or hide colors | Shift-Command-C |
Open Terminal preferences | Command-Comma (,) |
Break | Typing Command-Period (.) is equivalent to entering Control-C on the command line |
Print | Command-P |
Soft reset terminal emulator state | Option-Command-R |
Hard reset terminal emulator state | Control-Option-Command-R |
Open a URL | Hold down the Command key and double-click the URL |
Add the complete path to a file | Drag the file from the Finder into the Terminal window |
Export text as | Command-S |
Export selected text as | Shift-Command-S |
Reverse search command history | Control-R |
Toggle “Allow Mouse Reporting” option | Command-R |
Toggle “Use Option as Meta Key” option | Command-Option-O |
Show alternate screen | Option-Command-Page Down |
Hide alternate screen | Option-Command-Page Up |
Open man page for selection | Control-Shift-Command-Question Mark (?) |
Search man page index for selection | Control-Option-Command-Slash (/) |
Complete directory or file name | On a command line, type one or more characters, then press Tab |
Display a list of possible directory or file name completions | On a command line, type one or more characters, then press Tab twice |
Terminal 1 0 1 – Your Terminal Shortcut Words
See alsoCreate custom function keys in Terminal on MacChange Profiles Keyboard preferences in Terminal on MacApple Support article: Mac keyboard shortcuts