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| Keyboard shortcut to switch between pen tool and keyboard typing Hi, is there a keyboard shortcut to switch between pen writing and keyboard typing? This could be useful instead of moving the pointer and aim for the pen icon to write in with my tablet or pressing the keyboard writing icon to type in with the keyboard. I'm am not talking about the handwriting conversion tool. Thanks |
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| Re: Keyboard shortcut to switch between pen tool and keyboard typing J_N wrote: > Hi, is there a keyboard shortcut to switch between pen writing and > keyboard typing? This could be useful instead of moving the pointer > and aim for the pen icon to write in with my tablet or pressing the > keyboard writing icon to type in with the keyboard. > I'm am not talking about the handwriting conversion tool. No, there is no such shortcut. The only thing that I could think of would be to create a macro using AutoHotKey or something a alike. Rainald |
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| Re: Keyboard shortcut to switch between pen tool and keyboard typing Thanks! I will try it. |
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| Re: Keyboard shortcut to switch between pen tool and keyboard typing Nothing quick, but you can use the keyboard shortcuts for the menu system (Alt-T-W and then "S" to type or navigate to the desired pen) should do this. J_N <dglower******.com> wrote in news:6dc291eb09f2ec8d12a08af8b3e08157@nntp-gateway.com: > Hi, is there a keyboard shortcut to switch between pen writing and > keyboard typing? This could be useful instead of moving the pointer and > aim for the pen icon to write in with my tablet or pressing the keyboard > writing icon to type in with the keyboard. > I'm am not talking about the handwriting conversion tool. > Thanks > > |
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| This very thing aggravated me to no end when I first got my tablet a month or so ago. There is a way to sort of create your own shortcuts but it isn't ideal for too many tools at once because it relies on the tool button having text next to it. Directions: 1) On any toolbar, look for and click on the 'down' triangle at the far right end of the toolbar. 2) Mouse over "Add or Remove Buttons" that has appeared. 3) Click "Customize" or 1) right click any toolbar 2) choose 'Customize' from the bottom This is how I get to the customize buttons/toolbars dialog. I feel that this dialog can be pretty confusing. In time I hope to do an entire writeup regarding customizing ON (with a heavy lean toward pen/tablet users and voice users) but for now the Commands Tab is what we want (and should be the first visible one after step 3 above). The commands tab lets you drag a copy of one of the built-in buttons to any toolbar or menu. If you ever thought File and Edit should be combined, now you can. The important part to remember is that this new button is a copy of the 'real' button that OneNote will always provide and that you can always reset to. Don't be afraid to mess around, basically. 4) With the Customize dialog still open on the Commands Tab, click the button you wish you had a hotkey for. The only thing that will happen is the 'Modify Selection' button on the customize dialog is now usable. Click it. (Step 4 can also be done by just right-clicking the button once Customize is up) 5) The third item in the list that appears is "Name". If an ampersand(&) is placed in the name like so: "My &Button Name", the button is hotkeyed to ALT+(whatever comes after the ampersand), so ALT-B in this case. This is how ALT-F goes to File Menu (and how you can change that). The problem is that unless the button text is visible, the hotkey will not work. So... 6) Somewhere below that is the button style options which are: Default, Text Only one, Text Only two, and Image and Text. You want to select "Image and Text". 7) Once you Close the customize dialog, you can test your button out. It should have the same tool picture but its name with one letter underlined will appear next to it. Done and done. Reminder) Remember, your customized button is but a copy of the original. If you use the button on multiple toolbars then changing one will not change the others. Fullscreen mode toolbars also seem to be separate. Bonus: Besides enabling a hotkey, choosing to show button text allows another powerful tool to 'press' the button and that is speech recognition. My initial testing using ON and Vista's SR (for non-dictation usage) was promising. The command I stated would almost always select the correct button but there were two problems: 1) most tools didn't have text and 2) some text was redundant between toolbars causing the speech tool to make multiple matches. If you've ever used vista SR, you know it highlights the possible matches and you say "1", or "2" or what-have-you to choose between the options. Now I can give every button a unique name. Known Problems
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| Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
| Keyboard shortcut for launching snipping tool | Raju Kulkarni | Windows Vista | 2 | 08-11-2007 03:00 PM |
| Erratic Keyboard / Typing | Kathy | Vista Hardware | 10 | 04-22-2007 03:01 PM |
| Erratic Keyboard / Typing | Kathy | Vista Hardware | 0 | 04-12-2007 09:42 AM |
| Erratic Keyboard / Typing | Kathy | Vista Hardware | 0 | 04-12-2007 09:41 AM |
| Erratic Keyboard / Typing | Kathy | Vista Hardware | 0 | 04-12-2007 09:38 AM |
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