What works for you will depend on your own preferences, but try out different things, you might find a quicker way for you. Or, on my laptop the right-click button is just below my thumb, beside the touchpad so I find that quicker to use than Shift+F10. If I’m working on a keyboard that doesn’t have this key, I would probably use the right-click button on the mouse before using the Shift+F10. If you are used to using the keyboard for shortcuts, the ContextMenu key is in a really convenient place and possibly easier than using Shift+F10. The string of keys for this is then Shift+Space and then ContextMenu and D. If you use TechSmiths Snagit 12+ on Windows. ![]() This is the menu you see when right-clicking with the mouse. The shortcut to select the row is Shift+Space, this selects the entire row of the cell currently selected. Use this shortcut to display the shortcut menu. Using keyboard shortcuts to delete the row.Once you enable this feature, the number 4 key is used for moving the mouse left similarly, 6 for the right movement, 8 and 2 are up and down respectively. You will see a popup dialog box appear asking you to enable Mouse Keys. Using the mouse to select the row and then right-click and select Delete from the context menu The shortcut key for doing this is ALT + left SHIFT + Num-Lock.Using the mouse to select the row and then the delete command from the top menus.In Excel, I am going to delete a full row 3 different ways Step 4: Under the Control the mouse with the keyboard section, click Set up Mouse Keys. ![]() Step 3: Under Explore all settings section, click Make the mouse easier to use. Step 2: Go to Ease of Access > Ease of Access Center. In the video below I show you 3 ways to do the same thing. Step 1: Press Windows + S, input control panel and click the best match to open it. For example, when you bring up the context menu and press ‘I’ you will insert, pressing ‘M’ will insert comment, etc. Pressing this key is the same as clicking on the option in the menu. On the Context Menu, for each option you see, there will be one letter underlined. This key is also a context menu shortcut. But, on a lot of keyboards, on the bottom row, towards the right hand side in between the ‘alt’ and ‘ctrl’ keys you might see the key below. You will see that the menu that pops up is different depending on what you right-click on. If you didn’t notice this before try opening a program like Excel for example, select a full row and right-click on it and look at the menu, insert a chart and right-click on it and look at the menu, do the same selecting single cells, columns, images, shapes, and so on. ![]() This is a context menu, if you right-click on an image you may get a menu with options relating to formatting the image, right-clicking on a shape will bring up the menu with options relating to the shape, etc. Using shift+ctrl+f10 shortcut keys : To right click you just have to press shift+left ctrl+f10 key simultaneously. You may already have noticed that when you use the right-click button on your mouse you get a different menu on screen depending on what you are clicking on. Using fn+right ctrl(menu key) shortcut keys. This tip is aimed at people who already use keyboard shortcuts or are looking to try them out.
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