9.12 Keyboard


You're probably too young to remember the antique known as a typewriter. On some electric versions of this machine, you could hold down the letter X key to type a series of XXXXXXXs ”ideal for crossing something out in a contract, for example.

On a PC, every key behaves this way. Hold down any key long enough, and it starts spitting out repetitions, making it easy to type, "No WAAAAAY!" or "You go, grrrrrl!" for example. (The same rule applies when you hold down the arrow keys to scroll through the text document, hold down the = key to build a separator line between paragraphs, hold down Backspace to eliminate a word, and so on.) The Speed tab of this dialog box (Figure 9-12) governs the settings.

  • Repeat delay . This slider determines how long you must hold down the key before it starts repeating (to prevent triggering repetitions accidentally ).

  • Repeat rate . The second slider governs how fast each key spits out letters once the spitting has begun.

Figure 9-12. How fast do you want your keys to repeat? This control panel also offers a Hardware tab, but you won't go there very often. You'll use it exclusively when you're trying to troubleshoot your keyboard or its driver.
figs/09fig12.gif

After making these adjustments, click in the "Click here and hold down a key" test box to try out the new settings.

  • Cursor blink rate . The "Cursor blink rate" slider actually has nothing to do with the cursor, the little arrow that you move around with the mouse. Instead, it governs the blinking rate of the insertion point, the blinking marker that indicates where typing will begin when you're word processing, for example. A blink rate that's too slow makes it more difficult to find your insertion point in a window filled with data. A blink rate that's too rapid can be distracting.



Windows XP Pro. The Missing Manual
Windows XP Pro: The Missing Manual
ISBN: 0596008988
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 230

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