Use mouse more effectively

The following article will introduce you to some small tips to help you use your mouse more effectively.

TipsMake.com - The following article will introduce you to some small tips to help you use your mouse more effectively. For example, use the scroll button to scroll through tabs on the Ribbon in Office, or open a new tab in Firefox.

Surf on the Ribbon in Office 2007

When you are viewing a document in Word, Excel, or PowerPoint, a click of the mouse button will drag your document up or down, just like in a web page.

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When moving the mouse pointer over the Ribbon, the mouse scroll button takes on another function: gliding through the tabs in turn.

You may find that using the scroll wheel button is no faster than clicking on a tab as usual, however it does give you more choice anyway. Moreover, if you use the scroll button to switch tabs, you will avoid having to accidentally click on the tool icon accidentally while the actual one is clicking on the tab. Anyway, try it once.

Firefox users can do the same thing: when you are opening too many tabs on the browser, overcoming the number of tabs that can be displayed on the screen, just move the mouse over the tabs and scroll, the tab list. will flip through the screen.

Open a link with a new tab

One of the very interesting tricks on the browser is to hold down the Ctrl key using the mouse scroll button to zoom in or out quickly.

Another great tip: open a web link on a new tab by hovering over the link and clicking the mouse button. However, this tip may not work if you are installing the mouse help software and setting up a function when you click the mouse button. Normally, you won't have to worry, because this is the default function for Firefox, Internet Explorer and Google Chrome browsers.

Alternatively, you can close a tab on your browser by hovering over the tab and clicking the mouse button.

Remove double click in Windows

Double click - an operation that seems to be very simple, really confuses users. Have you ever seen someone double click on a single click - such as a web link - or just dragging a mouse and trying to click continuously on a program icon? These humorous situations are certainly ourselves having been used to being familiar with computers.

In the current world, when the power of the web has been confirmed and everything can work on the web, double-clicking seems to be outdated. Considering when using Windows, mainly we just or double click to open the folder or applications. So why not double click, instead of a single click solution for all?

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The steps are as follows:

  1. Click Start , type Folder Options , press Enter (for Windows Vista) or go to My Computer, on the menu select Tools - Folder Options (for Windows XP)
  2. On the General tab, find the item Click items as follows , select Single-click to open an item (point to select).
  3. Below are two options to display the underline , you can optionally choose. For the first option, all icons are underlined, just like links on the web. The second option will only show underscores when you hover over the icon. You should try both to see what options you like.
  4. Click OK and you're done.

Note: if you are used to double-clicking, it will take a few days to change your habits.

In addition, this solution will also make the selection of several files a bit different at the same time. If you previously hold down the Ctrl key and click each file you want to select, now you need to change it. Instead of clicking each file, just hold down Ctrl and drag the mouse over the file you want to select, stop for a second and wait for it to be highlighted and continue to drag the mouse over another file.

Update 25 May 2019
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