Learn AutoCAD hotkeys and commands with the AutoCAD Shortcut Keyboard guide to help you work faster and be more efficient while using AutoCAD software. Worldwide Sites You have been detected as being from. Set Right-click Behavior Based on Location • Click Application menu Options. • To control Default, Edit, and Command shortcut menus individually, select Right-Click Customization. • In the Right-Click Customization dialog box, under Default Mode or Edit Mode, select one of the following options to control what happens when you right-click in the drawing area and no command is in progress: • Repeat Last Command. Repeats the last command. Selecting this option turns off the Default and Edit shortcut menus. Right-clicking is the same as pressing Enter. • Shortcut Menu. Displays the Default or Edit shortcut menu. • Under Command Mode, select one of the following options to determine what happens when you right-click in the drawing area while a command is in progress: • Enter. ![]() Turns off the Command shortcut menu. Right-clicking is the same as pressing Enter. • Shortcut Menu: Always Enabled. Displays the Command shortcut menu. • Shortcut Menu: Enabled When Command Options Are Present. Displays the Command shortcut menu only when options are currently available in the Command prompt. In a Command prompt, options are enclosed in square brackets. If no options are available, right-clicking is the same as pressing Enter. In addition to turning the Default, Edit, and Command shortcut menus on and off, you can customize the options that are displayed on them. For example, you can add options to the Edit shortcut menu that are displayed only when circles are selected. This tutorial will show you how to use to create customized “right-click” (contextual) menus in OS X. If you’re a recent Windows ‘switcher’, you might have noticed that the right-click options lack some of the commonly used tasks (move-to, copy-to etc). OnMyCommand allows you to add these, and hundreds of other commands, back to your contextual menu. For the sake of this tutorial, I’m going to refer to “control-click” as “right-click”. As much as I love OS X – and it has become my primary OS by a long shot – I don’t think I’ll ever be happy using a single-button mouse. • • • • • First things first, download OnMyCommand from • Unpack the archive by double-clicking it. After it extracts it should automatically open the.dmg file. To install OnMyCommand, double-click the file Install OnMyCommandCM • Decide if you want to install this program for all of the users on your Mac, or just yourself. Select the appropriate button. • After the installation has completed successfully, you’ll need to restart Finder for the program to take effect. Click Do it for me now. • Click Quit Finder. Finder will shut down (your desktop items will temporarily disappear and any open Finder windows will close) and then restart. • Congrats – you’ve now installed OnMyCommand. • If you right-click a file or anywhere on your desktop, you’ll notice the menu hasn’t changed at all. Lets change that and install some of the example commands. • Back in the.dmg file locate the folder titled Examples and then inside it, the folder titled First time users start here. Double-click the file Install example commands. • Click Yes as you have no preferences to worry about. • Click OK after the installation was successful. • Finder will restart on its own (again, your desktop icons will momentarily disappear). Now right-click somewhere in a Finder window and in the context menu you’ll see an entry titled On My Command.
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March 2019
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