Platform-dependent. For Turbo C, enter initgraph and press Ctrl+F1.
[CTRL]+C is achieved by holding CTRL while pressing C.
In Microsoft Word, CTRL+SHIFT+PLUS is used to apply superscript formatting with automatic spacing to the selected text.
Ctrl plus Q, often written as Ctrl-Q or ^Q, is a key combination used to send a command to an application. It is accomplished by pressing the key labelled CTRL (labeling will vary with non-English keyboards) and holding it pressed while typing the letter Q, then releasing both keys.Keyboard shortcuts (often implement with key combinations) offer a fast alternative to using the mouse or more verbose commands to the experienced user.No standard meaning is assigned to Ctrl-Q; the interpretation is entirely in the responsibility of the application with which the command is used. Traditionally, Ctrl-Q would be used on text terminals to continue text flow after suspending it with Ctrl-S. Some terminal applications or console and command windows may still be inclined to interpret Ctrl-S and Ctrl-Q in this manner for traditional reasons.
The CTRL key is the only difference. What it actually does depends on the currently active program and/or control, and whether or not the key combo has been implemented or not. If not, the shell processes the key combo. On my system (Windows 7), both combos bring up the task switcher.
Ctrl - 2009 F1 1-4 was released on: USA: 21 July 2009
ctrl an plus zoom the screen in an ctrl minus dezooms it
Platform-dependent. For Turbo C, enter initgraph and press Ctrl+F1.
press f1 and ctrl
ctrl shift - reverses the effect of ctrl shift =
ctrl plus r reloads a webpage.
Press the Ctrl - F1 keyboard shortcut.
Ctrl + 1
It makes what is on the screen bigger. Another way to do it is ctrl + plus or ctrl + scroll wheel up/down.
Don't you mean jedward? Press ctrl alt f1 its really kwl
It increases the magnification of the screen. CTRL plus _ does the reverse.
Ctrl plus J is used to justify text or a paragraph.