Tuesday 28 May 2013

Do you know about these



Do you know Hair and Nails grow even after death?

Folklore from earliest times abounds with ghoulish tales of the coffins of clean-shaven or bald men being opened to reveal corpses shrouded in luxuriant hair and beards. Formerly neatly manicured fingernails are reported to have reached Chinese mandarin lengths. The New York Medical Record in 1877 carried a report by a Dr Caldwell of Iowa, describing an exhumation which Caldwell said he attended. He claimed that the hair and beard of the previously clean-shaven corpse had burst open the coffin and was growing through the cracks.
          Such stories, however, belong to the realm of folklore, for there is absolutely no scientific basis for this belief. The only way in which growth of human tissue can take place is by cell multiplication, and the only way that can occur is for the cells to receive a plentiful supply of oxygen. When the heart and lungs cease to function at death, the body no longer receives oxygen and cellular activity stops. Any independent continuance of hair or nail cell activity would be momentary and certainly immeasurable. The shrinkage of the skin surrounding the hair follicles of scalp and beard, and that of the fingertips after death might reveal a further 1/16 inch or so of existing hair or nail – but by no means sufficient to burst a lid off a coffin.


Elephants never forgot

There is apparently some truth in the belief that elephants never forget. In a experiment, Professor B. Rensch of Munster University in Germany showed that an elephant recalled a number of tests with a 73-100 per cent accuracy even after the lapse of a year. The Experiment – in which the elephant was taught to associate certain symbols with food – proved that although elephants are not very intelligent, and learn extremely slowly, once they have mastered something it will remain in their memories for a considerable length of time.
          There is, however, no foundation in the belief that elephants are afraid of mice.

Crocodiles shed tears

            The phrase ‘crocodile tears’ meaning hypocritical grief, has been used in literature and everyday speech for hundreds of years. It stems from an early belief that the crocodile wept while devouring its victims. In his De Proprietatibus Rerum, the 13th century English friar Bartholomaeus Anglicus wrote of the belief:
          “If the crocodile findeth a man by the brim of the water, or by the cliff, he slayeth him if he may, and then weep upon him and swallow him at last.
          The belief that the crocodile is unhappy at killing its prey is quiet erroneous, of course, but crocodiles do shed ‘tear’ as a simple reflex action when their jaws are opened wide – as we might when we yawn. And so there is some basis to the old myth after all.

Microsoft word & Excel basic shortcut keys



Microsoft Excel shortcut keys

Below is a listing of all the major shortcut keys in Microsoft Excel. See the computer shortcut page if you are looking for other shortcut keys used in other programs.

Shortcut
Description
F2
Edit the selected cell.
F5
Go to a specific cell. For example, C6.
F7
Spell check selected text or document.
F11
Create chart.
Ctrl + Shift + ;
Enter the current time.
Ctrl + ;
Enter the current date.
Alt + Shift + F1
Insert New Worksheet.
Shift + F3
Open the Excel formula window.
Shift + F5
Bring up search box.
Ctrl + A
Select all contents of the worksheet.
Ctrl + B
Bold highlighted selection.
Ctrl + I
Italic highlighted selection.
Ctrl + K
Insert link.
Ctrl + U
Underline highlighted selection.
Ctrl + 5
Strikethrough highlighted selection.
Ctrl + P
Bring up the print dialog box to begin printing.
Ctrl + Z
Undo last action.
Ctrl + F9
Minimize current window.
Ctrl + F10
Maximize currently selected window.
Ctrl + F6
Switch between open workbooks or windows.
Ctrl + Page up
Move between Excel work sheets in the same Excel document.
Ctrl + Page down
Move between Excel work sheets in the same Excel document.
Ctrl + Tab
Move between Two or more open Excel files.
Alt + =
Create a formula to sum all of the above cells
Ctrl + '
Insert the value of the above cell into cell currently selected.
Ctrl + Shift + !
Format number in comma format.
Ctrl + Shift + $
Format number in currency format.
Ctrl + Shift + #
Format number in date format.
Ctrl + Shift + %
Format number in percentage format.
Ctrl + Shift + ^
Format number in scientific format.
Ctrl + Shift + @
Format number in time format.
Ctrl + Arrow key
Move to next section of text.
Ctrl + Space
Select entire column.
Shift + Space
Select entire row.
Ctrl + -
Delete the slected column or row.
Ctrl + Shift + =
Insert a new column or row.
Ctrl + Home
Move to cell A1.
Ctrl + ~
Switch between showing Excel formulas or their values in cells.

Microsoft Word shortcut keys

We use Keyboard shortcut keys all the time, because it helps us to do the work quickly. So, below is a listing of all the major shortcut keys in Microsoft Word.
Shortcut
Description
Ctrl + 0
Adds or removes 6pts of spacing before a paragraph.
Ctrl + A
Select all contents of the page.
Ctrl + B
Bold highlighted selection.
Ctrl + C
Copy selected text.
Ctrl + D
Open the font preferences window.
Ctrl + E
Aligns the line or selected text to the center of the screen.
Ctrl + F
Open find box.
Ctrl + I
Italic highlighted selection.
Ctrl + J
Aligns the selected text or line to justify the screen.
Ctrl + K
Insert link.
Ctrl + L
Aligns the line or selected text to the left of the screen.
Ctrl + M
Indent the paragraph.
Ctrl + P
Open the print window.
Ctrl + R
Aligns the line or selected text to the right of the screen.
Ctrl + T
Create a hanging indent.
Ctrl + U
Underline highlighted selection.
Ctrl + V
Paste.
Ctrl + X
Cut selected text.
Ctrl + Y
Redo the last action performed.
Ctrl + Z
Undo last action.
Ctrl + Shift + L
Quickly create a bullet point.
Ctrl + Shift + F
Change the font.
Ctrl + Shift + >
Increase selected font +1pts up to 12pt and then increases font +2pts.
Ctrl + ]
Increase selected font +1pts.
Ctrl + Shift + <
Decrease selected font -1pts if 12pt or lower, if above 12 decreases font by +2pt.
Ctrl + [
Decrease selected font -1pts.
Ctrl + / + c
Insert a cent sign (¢).
Ctrl + ' + <char>
Insert a character with an accent (grave) mark, where <char> is the character you want. For example, if you wanted an accented รจ you would use Ctrl + ' + e as your shortcut key. To reverse the accent mark use the opposite accent mark, often on the tilde key.
Ctrl + Shift + *
View or hide non printing characters.
Ctrl + <left arrow>
Moves one word to the left.
Ctrl + <right arrow>
Moves one word to the right.
Ctrl + <up arrow>
Moves to the beginning of the line or paragraph.
Ctrl + <down arrow>
Moves to the end of the paragraph.
Ctrl + Del
Deletes word to right of cursor.
Ctrl + Backspace
Deletes word to left of cursor.
Ctrl + End
Moves the cursor to the end of the document.
Ctrl + Home
Moves the cursor to the beginning of the document.
Ctrl + Spacebar
Reset highlighted text to the default font.
Ctrl + 1
Single-space lines.
Ctrl + 2
Double-space lines.
Ctrl + 5
1.5-line spacing.
Ctrl + Alt + 1
Changes text to heading 1.
Ctrl + Alt + 2
Changes text to heading 2.
Ctrl + Alt + 3
Changes text to heading 3.
Alt + Ctrl + F2
Open new document.
Ctrl + F1
Open the Task Pane.
Ctrl + F2
Display the print preview.
Ctrl + Shift + >
Increases the highlighted text size by one.
Ctrl + Shift + <
Decreases the highlighted text size by one.
Ctrl + Shift + F6
Opens to another open Microsoft Word document.
Ctrl + Shift + F12
Prints the document.
F1
Open Help.
F4
Repeat the last action performed (Word 2000+)
F5
Open the find, replace, and go to window in Microsoft Word.
F7
Spellcheck and grammar check selected text or document.
F12
Save as.
Shift + F3
Change the text in Microsoft Word from uppercase to lowercase or a capital letter at the beginning of every word.
Shift + F7
Runs a Thesaurus check on the word highlighted.
Shift + F12
Save.
Shift + Enter
Create a soft break instead of a new paragraph.
Shift + Insert
Paste.
Shift + Alt + D
Insert the current date.
Shift + Alt + T
Insert the current time.

In addition to the above shortcut keys users can also use their mouse as a method of quickly do something commonly performed. Below some are examples of mouse shortcuts.

Mouse shortcuts
Description
Click, hold, and drag
Selects text from where you click and hold to the point you drag and let go.
Double-click
If double-click a word, selects the complete word.
Double-click
Double-clicking on the left, center, or right of a blank line will make the alignment of the text left, center, or right aligned.
Double-click
Double-clicking anywhere after text on a line will set a tab stop.
Triple-click
Selects the line or paragraph of the text the mouse triple-clicked.
Ctrl + Mouse wheel
Zooms in and out of document.

How do I create a Windows shortcut key?



How do I create a Windows shortcut key?


Create a shortcut

1.     Open the folder or directory that contains the program you wish to create a shortcut for.
2.     Right-click on the program and click Create Shortcut.
3.     This will create a shortcut named "Shortcut to <your program>" in the directory you are in. If you wish to rename this shortcut, right-click the file and click rename.
4.     Once the above steps have been completed, you can copy or cut this shortcut and paste it anywhere to execute this program.

Assign shortcut key to that Windows shortcut Once the shortcut has been created to assign a shortcut key to that Windows shortcut follow the below steps.

1.     Right-click the shortcut and click Properties.
2.     Click the Shortcut tab.
3.     Click in the Shortcut key box and press a letter. For example, if you press "p" the shortcut key will automatically be made Ctrl + Alt + P. Which means if saved when pressing Ctrl and Alt and “P” all at the same time will run that shortcut.