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Useful tip Mac. However, when browsing I tend to use the mouse for navigation not the keyboard. Cheers anyway.Your browser likely can do that.. On Mac using Safari, Chrome, or Firefox, CMD "up arrow" scrolls me to top and CMD "down arrow" to the bottom. WINDOWS uses the CONTROL key instead of CMD.
Useful tip Mac. However, when browsing I tend to use the mouse for navigation not the keyboard. Cheers anyway.
A fixed button in the footer is not hard to do.
On Windows Chrome I Use The Scroll Wheel on the Mouse or the Home and End Keys on the keyboard.When looking at a long thread if you scroll back up, a link button, #Top appears at bottom right of Screen. This is very useful, but it would be nice if the button was permanently visible as per the old forum.
Can this be looked at please.
Reminder: He said he doesn't want to use the keyboard... Post #4.
Hence the reply "Scroll Wheel on the Mouse" - but I see no harm in people suggesting alternatives, we all get to learn things........Reminder: He said he doesn't want to use the keyboard... Post #4.
I supported a system like that and then eventually had to use it myself. The users would complain that the system would "lock up" on them. They would reboot their PCs and end up leaving the database connections locked which required me, being the only support person in the company, to have to use the admin account to clear the connections. Many years later due to company attrition, I mean lay-offs, I ended up doing order administration and I saw why the interface "locked". The software utilized forms for data-entry such as customers, orders, etc. While not really an MDI program, some of the screens such as customer-lookup, would pull up a secondary selection screen. If for some reason the user clicked on the main customer-lookup screen by accident, this would lock everything up. After years of blaming the problem on user-error, it was actually the software that was to blame. If the main customer-lookup screen wasn't selectable while the look-up screen was active, this wouldn't have happened. When I mentioned this to my manager, he looked at me with his typical glazed over clueless look in his eyes.Reminds me of the time I programmed entry screens for a management information database system in FoxPro. Every screen had pop-ups and drop-downs for all the different field values to be entered for each type of screen. This was a mac network, so I assumed it would be a great thing for users. I was called back five minutes after our area secretary tried it for the first time. "You do realize I am a touch typist, don't you?" Oops. Later I delivered a new version with all typable fields that I think were called verified fields? The list of valid entries was in the code, so she could type them in, but they had to be valid for the fields. Always know your customer!