Character Map
Character
Map is a utility program that lets you examine every character in a
given font and choose and easily insert into your documents special
characters, such as trademark (™ and ®) and copyright symbols (©);
foreign currency symbols (such as ¥), accented letters, and
nonalphabetic symbols (such as fractions, ¾); DOS line-drawing
characters (+), items from specialized fonts such as Symbol and
Wingdings; or the common arrow symbols (←, →, ↑, and ↓). Some fonts
include characters not mapped to the keyboard. Character Map lets you
choose them, too, from its graphical display. The Program Map displays
Unicode, DOS, and Windows fonts’ characters. You can choose the
character set, rearrange the items in a font (such as grouping all
currency types together) to eliminate hunting, and search for a given
character. Character Map works through the Windows Clipboard. You simply
choose a character you want to use, click Copy, and it moves onto the
Clipboard. Switch to your destination application (typically a word
processing file), position the cursor, and choose Paste. To reach
Character Map, click Start and in the Search box, type Character Map. Then, in the list of results, double-click Character Map.
Paint
This is another perennial Windows accessory
that, like Calculator and WordPad, Microsoft finally realized either had
to be updated or put out to pasture. With so many free pixel editing
programs around, one wonders why it is necessary to keep Paint out of
the pasture, but perhaps it’s to show off the new “ribbon” interface and
help Windows 7 look more unified. The ribbon was introduced and
popularized by Office 2007. We personally dislike the ribbon because it
uses up increasingly precious vertical screen real estate (as we see
more wide screens on laptops and monitors) and because it rearranges
itself and messes with what was a good thing—menus and commands that
stay put. But alas. The version of ribbon integrated into Paint and
WordPad with Windows 7 is called the “Scenic Ribbon.”
Essentially, Paint is a simple drawing program
that creates and edits bitmapped images in a variety of formats. Using
free-form drawing tools, text, and special effects, you can create
projects such as invitations, maps, signs, and wallpaper for your
desktop, and you can edit images linked into documents created by other
programs. Paint is called a bitmapped image editor. Your computer’s screen is divided into small dots (pixels or pels) that are controlled by the smallest division of computer information—bits. A bitmap is a collection of bits of information that creates an image when assigned (mapped)
to dots on the screen. This bitmap is similar to one of those giant
electronic billboards in sports arenas that can display the score, a
message, or even a picture by turning on and off specific light bulbs in
the grid.
Being a bitmapped drawing program, rather than
an object-oriented drawing program such as Adobe Illustrator or
CorelDraw, Paint has some significant limitations to keep in mind—also
some advantages. After you paint a shape, you can’t move it
independently. You can use the computer to remove an area of the
painting and place it somewhere else—as if you were cutting out a piece
of the canvas and pasting it elsewhere. But all the dots in the area get
moved, not just the ones in the shape you’re interested in. Paint can
store output in a variety of formats: BMP, DIB, JPG, TIF, GIF, and PNG.
Paint
for Windows 7 is the tenth iteration of Paint included in a Windows OS
(originally called Microsoft Windows Paint in Windows 1.0) though it is
dubbed version 6.1. (Vista’s version was 6.0.) In addition to the new
toolbar previously mentioned, including a configurable Quick Access
Toolbar (QAT), Paint now also has full PNG alpha channel compatibility.
People who work with transparent color channels in PNG files will
appreciate this, perhaps eliminating the need for an additional image
editing program in their software suites. There are also now 9 brush
types instead of 12 (as in the XP and Vista versions) but those brushes
are much more expressive. Whereas they used to be just shapes, now they
are textures such as waterbrush, crayon, oil brush, highlighter, and
pencil. There are now 23 predefined smooth-drawing shapes instead of
just 4. Figure 5 shows a screenshot of Paint.
Notepad
Notepad is a simple, no-frills text editor that
does no fancy formatting (though it does enable you to change the
display font) and is popular for composing “clean” ASCII (.txt) files. I
use Notepad to jot down quick notes. You could say Notepad is a text editor, whereas WordPad (see the following discussion of WordPad) is a word processor. Unlike WordPad, Notepad cannot view or edit Microsoft Word (.doc) or Rich Text Format (.rtf) files. It’s a perfect tool to call up whenever you need to view a simple README.TXT
file or fine-tune some program code (programmers like this tool).
Although they’re visually boring and lackluster, text files do have some
important advantages over formatted
text documents. Most importantly, they are the lowest common
denominator for exchanging text between different programs and even
between different types of computers. Literally any kind of word
processor and many other types of programs, from email tools to
databases, can share textual information using simple text files,
regardless of computer type or operating system. To be sure your
recipients who are using other kinds of computers can read a text email
attachment or a text file on a disk, stick with the simple text files
such as the ones Notepad creates. Windows recognizes any file with a .txt extension as a text file and opens it in Notepad when you click it.
If
you can’t see all the text in a Notepad window you must manually turn
on word wrap to get the text in a file to wrap around within the window.
By default, word wrap is turned off, which can be annoying. The good
news is that word wrap is now a persistent setting. After you turn it on
and then close Notepad, it should be on the next time you run it. If
you need to edit program code, be sure to turn off word wrap, or your
program lines will wrap, making editing and analysis of code more
confusing. If you still can’t see enough text,
Notepad now supports changing the font display. Change the display font
from the Format menu. Choosing a monospaced font (for example, Courier)
might help you line up columns. Choosing a smaller font and a
proportional font (for example, Times) crams more text into the window. |
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Sticky Notes
Using Sticky Notes is analogous to using
physical Post-It Notes. You might take their function for granted
because they look like simple Post-It Notes. However, they are quite
sophisticated and can be a boon to Tablet users. As of Windows 7, Sticky
Notes works with pen input (write directly on the notepad) as well as
keyboard typing. When you reach the edge of the note using the stylus,
the note will enlarge as necessary to accept your handwriting or
drawing. Scratchout gestures have been implemented as well. Sticky Notes
can be organized as a stacked pad of notes. So, instead of having many
different notes stuck on your physical desk or on the edges of your
computer monitor, you have just one little pad and can easily scroll
through all the notes. This enables you to write whatever you want and
even draw a small picture. Take Sticky Notes into consideration the next
time you need to jot down a list of important items, such as a grocery
list. Click the Sticky Notes icon on the taskbar to alternate between
showing and hiding all your notes.
Another neat feature of Sticky Notes is its
capability to record a sound. This sound is stored by the Sticky Note
and can be played as many times as you want or need. Little verbal
reminders can be a great way to keep you updated. To leave a short
verbal reminder, click the red Record dot and Sticky Notes will start
recording. Click the stop button when you are done recording or when the
time of recording has run out.
To play the sound, click the Play button. The recording will be deleted only when you delete the note or record over the sound.
WordPad
For
more capable word processing than Notepad can accomplish, you can use
WordPad. Many people think they need to purchase Microsoft Office (which
includes Microsoft Word) to do serious word processing, and Microsoft
would love you to do so, but it is not necessary. Though it’s not
Microsoft Word, WordPad works fine for most everyday writing chores. And
now with the updated Windows 7 version that includes some tasty
additions, this is even truer. As mentioned elsewhere in the book,
WordPad also now includes the Scenic Ribbon that debuted with Office
2007, supposedly easing use.
Note
To get around the display issue stated above, you can download the free Word Viewer program from Microsoft. Search microsoft.com
for Word Viewer. You want the download named “Word Viewer,” not “Word
Viewer 2003.” Also download and install the Microsoft Office
Compatibility Pack for Word, Excel, and PowerPoint 2007 File Formats.
Together, these two downloads let you open, view, and print any
Microsoft Word program with all formatting intact. (There are similar
free viewer downloads for Excel and PowerPoint.) With the Word Viewer
and the Compatibility Pack installed, you can open, view, and print any
Microsoft Word document; you just won’t be able to edit or save it. |
WordPad offers most of the formatting tools
people need for typical writing projects, and the price is right. You
can edit documents of virtually any length, it supports drag-and-drop
editing, and it can accept graphics pasted into it from the Windows
Clipboard. WordPad enables you to do standard character formatting of
font, style, and size; paragraph formatting of line spacing, indents and
margins, bullets, justification, and right and left alignment; adjust
tab stops; search and replace; and insert headers and footers. It has
pagination control, lets you insert and edit graphics, and has Undo and
Print Preview.
WordPad doesn’t do tables, columns, indexes, or
master documents; it also doesn’t have outline view or legal line
numbering. Go get Word or WordPerfect if you have that level of word
processing needs. WordPad can open and save documents in Rich Text
Format, text files such as Notepad creates, Unicode, Word for Windows (.doc and now .docx files from Office 2007), and Windows Write format (.wri).
WordPad correctly opens even incorrectly named (wrong extension) RTF
and Word 6 files if you select the All Documents option in the Files of
Type area in the Open dialog box or type the document’s full name. If
WordPad doesn’t detect a file’s format, it opens it as a text-only file.
Note that if a document contains formatting information created by
another application, it will likely appear as garbage characters mixed
with the document’s normal text.
If
you find that Inserting and adjusting tab stops in WordPad is a pain,
there is an easier way. You can easily insert and adjust tabs in WordPad
by clicking in the ruler area. Choose View, then click the Ruler button
to turn on the ruler. Then, click in the ruler area where you want to
insert a tab stop. You can drag the cursor left and right to see a
vertical rule to align the stop. To kill a tab stop, drag it out of the
ruler area into the document. |
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As of Windows 7 (WordPad 6.1) it is now easier to insert pictures by simply clicking a Picture button on the Home ribbon. See Figure 6.
However, the more-extensive Insert menu of version 6.0 is gone. In the
old WordPad it was possible to easily insert all kinds of object items
such as PowerPoint slides, Excel spreadsheets and charts, Word documents
(if you had Office installed, obviously), and other OLE objects right
into a WordPad document. With WordPad 6.1 your options (at least via the
ribbon and menu) are limited to pictures and date/time, although the
Paint Drawing button on the ribbon makes it very easy to cook up a
graphic right there in your document. Just click the button, do your
drawing in Paint, and click the red X to close the Paint window. Your
image is dropped into the WordPad document. Resize and reposition as
necessary.