As noted, a window is a
content container. Desktop windows are of two basic types: modal and
non-modal. A non-modal window is one that you can switch out of and then
switch back to. A modal window is one that requires you to perform an
action before it allows you to do something else. An alert box is an
example of a modal window something you must deal with before you can do
other work.
A non-modal application window is shown with some of its window
interface elements identified. Here you can work in more than one window
at the same time. The application is Microsoft Publisher, and the
document is an origami crane. Windows were designed to work with both your mouse and your keyboard. You won’t use touch to use windows of this type.
A non-modal window
Here’s a brief description of the important window elements:
• Title bar. This bar
contains the window name and, usually, the name of the application that
is responsible for it. Drag the title bar to move the window from place
to place.
When a title bar has focus, its window is the active window and can be acted upon.
• Window menu. The
application icon is actually the Window menu, put there to allow you to
perform window actions with your keyboard. Click the icon or press
Alt+spacebar to reveal commands that allow you to restore, move, size,
minimize, maximize, and close (Alt+F4) the window .
Window commands
• Restore command. This command toggles a maximized window back to its previous size.
• Move command. This command selects the window and allows you to use the arrow keys or your mouse cursor to move the window in any direction.
• Size command. This command allows you to use the arrow keys or your mouse cursor to resize your window.
• Minimize. Click this button on the toolbar or select this command to reduce a window to an icon.
• Maximize. Click this button on the toolbar or select this command to display a window full screen.
• Restore. Click this button on the toolbar or select this command to return the window to its former size (before you minimized or maximized it).
• Close button. Click this button or press Alt+F4 to close a window. The application should prompt you to save any changes, if necessary.
Note that you can press Alt+spacebar to
open the Window menu, and then press the underlined key to execute the
command. This is a general Windows feature. For example, Alt+N minimizes
the window.
• Window border. Drag a window border to resize the window in one direction. Use the window corner to resize the window in two directions.
• Scroll bars. The
scroll bars are used as a visual indicator for your horizontal or
vertical position inside the window. Click a scroll bar arrow to move
one increment in that direction. Click the scroll bar to move one screen
page in that direction. Drag the scroll box (slider) to move the view
of the window contents as far as you like.
There are many keystrokes that move your
window view. Use Home to move to the top of the window; End to move to
the bottom; and Page Up or Page Down to move up or down one full page or
screen. These keystrokes support the vertical toolbar.
To switch between windows on the Desktop, click a window to make it active or use the Task Switcher.
Sometimes a window can be
both modal and non-modal. A modal window is one that requires an action
before you can close it or that forces you to act before you can do
anything else. Modal windows illustrate some important general window
navigation features.
Figure 1 shows a Save dialog box. It is both non-modal and modal at the same
time. You can do things in programs other than Word; but it is a modal
window for Word because you can’t do anything else in Word until you
dismiss it.
Figure 1 . A Save dialog box
Non-modal windows have the following features:
• A Default action. This button is usually drawn with a bold button frame and can be activated by pressing Enter. Figure 2 shows the Save button bordered with a blue dotted frame.
• A Cancel or Escape action. This removes the dialog box without making changes. Press the Esc key or click the Cancel button to perform this action.
• A Tab order. Press the Tab key to move from button to button in the tab order, or press Alt+Tab to move backward in that order.
• Shortcuts. Dialog
boxes and alert boxes have keystroke equivalents for buttons, fields,
and other items. They are usually indicated by underlined letters. Here,
you press the S key to perform the Save action.
To use the Task Switcher
1. Press Alt+Tab to view the Task Switcher .
Figure 2 The Task Switcher lets you switch quickly between open windows. It also works in Metro.
2. Hold the Alt key
down and press the Tab key repeatedly to cycle through all the open
windows until the one you want is highlighted.
3. Release the Alt key. You can use Shift+Alt+Tab to move backward through the Tab order.
Tip
Devices such as the Microsoft Intelli-Mouse
and apps such as Move Mouse provide options for manipulating
windows—even the elusive scroll right and left functionality.