I’ve always wanted to try to do something similar (no pun intended) using Lucene, so I spent a couple hours this weekend banging around on it. Sphere was one of the companies that presented and they launched a product called the “ Sphere It Contextual Widget for blogs“, which is JavaScript widget you can add to your blog or content focused site that displays contextually similar blogs and blog posts for the reader. If you read this blog, you probably paid a smidgen of attention to the Web 2.0 Conference held last week in San Francisco. Use this to access Home, End, Page Up, Page Down, the F1-F7 keys, and the number keypad. The function key is unique to notebook computers, and exists solely to access secondary functions on the keyboard. If an application does include a control-key shortcut, it will be abbreviated as “^”.Ĭontrol-clicking is equivalent to a right-click. You won’t generally use it in Mac applications. The control key exists primarily for compatibility with Windows and Unix applications. You can also use option with the arrow & delete keys to work with entire words at a time. Option-dragging items will copy them instead of moving them. For instance, ⌥-2 gives you â„¢, and pressing ⌥ in conjunction with vowels lets you place accents over international characters. When ⌥ is used as a modifier without ⌘, it accesses alternate characters. (The key has “alt” printed on it for compatibility with Windows applications.) In the menus, option is represented by “⌥”, presumably because there weren’t any other symbols left. (For instance ⌘⌥W will close all of an application’s windows, instead of just one.) If you pull down a menu and then press option, the menu items will change to their variant options in real time. This is used in combination with ⌘ and ⇧ for even lower-priority menu items, or for variations on standard items. Shift-clicking can also be used to select a range of items. There aren’t enough letters to match every menu item, so shift is generally used in combination with ⌘ for less-commonly accessed menu items. Learning these shortcuts can save you a lot of time.Ĭommand-clicking can also be used to select multiple items at once. ⌘-Tab quickly switches between applications. There are several standard commands which are consistent across nearly all Mac applications, such as ⌘Q (Quit), ⌘W (Close), ⌘C (Copy), ⌘V (Paste), ⌘X (Cut), ⌘O (Open), ⌘A (Select All), ⌘N (New), and ⌘-? for Help. This is known as the “Command” key, as in “press Command-q to quit.” This can be used to access most major menu items by pressing the key combination listed next to those items in the menu.
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