6. Menus and dialogue boxes
Menus
Displaying a menu
Click MENU anywhere in the desktop to open a menu. Menus are contextual, that is to say
where the pointer is at the time you click the MENU button determines what kind of menu
will be opened and so what options will be available to you. Clicking MENU on an icon on
the Icon Bar will open a menu relating to that device or application whereas clicking MENU
in a filer directory window or on the background to the desktop will open a menu relating to
the 'filer' or the 'pinboard' respectively.
Choosing from a menu
Once you have opened a menu (by clicking the MENU button) you choose a menu option
by clicking either SELECT or ADJUST. If you use SELECT then the menu option is
chosen and the menu will disappear: if you use ADJUST to make your selection then the
menu option is chosen but the menu will remain open on screen for you to make further
selections.
Choosing a submenu
Some menus have sub-menus. A sub-menu is a secondary menu which offers further options
for a particular menu item. To open a sub-menu simply move the pointer to the arrow which
indicates the existence of a sub-menu and the sub-menu will open. Menus can have more
than one sub-menu. To move back to a parent menu, simply move the pointer back (without
clicking any mouse buttons). When you want to make multiple selections from sub-menus it
is useful to use ADJUST (which keeps the menu on screen after a selection has been made)
to save having to open the menus again.
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