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Work in multiple windows.


Q. I have lots of RAM memory in my computer so I know it's it's  

1. Contraction of it is.

2. Contraction of it has. See Usage Note at its.


it's it is or it has
it's be ~have
 capable of keeping many windows open at the same time. That's the good news. The bad news is that if I have one Excel A full-featured spreadsheet for Windows and the Macintosh from Microsoft. It can link many spreadsheets for consolidation and provides a wide variety of business graphics and charts for creating presentation materials.  file open and I open a second one, the first automatically closes. The same thing happens in Word. I don't don't  

1. Contraction of do not.

2. Nonstandard Contraction of does not.

n.
A statement of what should not be done: a list of the dos and don'ts.
 understand it. I know that other computer users have no difficulty keeping many Word and Excel windows open so they can conveniently switch from one to the other. What am I doing wrong?

A. It's not that you're doing anything wrong; it's just that you have to reset your defaults in Word and Excel, and that's easy to do.

Let's begin with Excel. Click on Tools, Options and then the View tab and check the box next to Windows in Taskbar An on-screen toolbar that displays the active applications (tasks). Clicking on a taskbar button restores the application to its previous appearance. Windows 95 popularized this feature. See Win Taskbar.  (see screenshot See screen shot.  below) and click on OK.

Now do the same in Word (and any other Microsoft applications you want to function this way); the View tabs in the other applications will look a little different, but all have the Windows in Taskbar option.

With your new default, you can have many windows open at the same time. However, that solution lea& to a different problem: If you have many windows open, the icons representing them won't fit on the taskbar so it's hard to access them, or if too many icons are squeezed into that limited space, you may not be able to read the file name. Fortunately, we also have a solution for that: Make the taskbar bigger.

To do this, position your cursor (1) The symbol used to point to some element on screen. On Windows, Mac and other graphics-based screens, it is also called a "pointer," and it changes shape as it is moved with the mouse into different areas of the application.  at the upper edge of the blue taskbar until you see a double-headed arrow, as shown below.

Drag the edge upward; that will double the width-and the icon capacity--of the taskbar from this:

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

To this:

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

Also notice in the upper screenshot that when I hold my cursor over the Excel icon, a message pops up telling me that three spreadsheet spreadsheet

Computer software that allows the user to enter columns and rows of numbers in a ledgerlike format. Any cell of the ledger may contain either data or a formula that describes the value that should be inserted therein based on the values in other cells.
 windows are open. However, when I increase the size of the taskbar, that message disappears and now icons for the three windows can be seen in the lower screenshot. The advantage of the larger taskbar is that it's easier to identify the icons because they are tagged with names of files, as shown in the wider taskbar. But the only way to identify the three icons in the narrow taskbar is to click on one, evoking a list of the open windows (see screenshot below).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]

The screenshot above shows six open Excel windows--each clearly identified. The disadvantage is that you have to take extra steps to see them, and then you have to click on the icon to bring it on the screen.

Well, there's a solution for that, too, and this is the method I use because it lets me easily and quickly identify every open window. Hold down the Alt key A keyboard key that is pressed with a letter or digit key to command the computer. For example, in Windows, holding down the Alt key and pressing F displays the File menu if it is a current option on screen. Pressing Alt-Tab toggles between applications. See Flip 3D.  as you repeatedly press the Tab key A keyboard key that moves the cursor to the next tab stop. See tab. ; your window will switch from one open application to another, display the opening screen for each so you can easily identify the open file and bring it to the screen (see screenshot).

[ILLUSTRATION OMITTED]
COPYRIGHT 2004 American Institute of CPA's
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2004, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Technology Q&A
Author:Zarowin, Stanley
Publication:Journal of Accountancy
Date:Mar 1, 2004
Words:525
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