Tex-Edit Plus takes full advantage of Apple’s extended keyboard: • Forward delete, home, end, page up, page down and cursor keys are active. • The F1-F4 keys invoke the standard undo, cut, copy and paste commands. Moving the cursor: • Option-left/right arrow moves the cursor one word at a time. • Command-left/right arrow moves the cursor to the beginning/end of the line. • Option-up/down arrow moves the cursor to the beginning/end of the page. • Command-up/down arrow moves the cursor to the beginning/end of the document. • Option-page up moves the cursor to the top of the previous screenful of text. • Option-page down moves the cursor to the bottom of the next screenful of text. Extending the selection: • Shift-arrow extends a selection. • Shift-option-left/right arrow extends the selection one word at a time. • Shift-command-left/right arrow extends the selection to the beginning/end of the line. • Shift-option-up/down arrow extends the selection to the beginning/end of the page. • Shift-command-up/down arrow extends the selection to the beginning/end of the document. • Shift-option-page up extends the selection to the top of the previous screenful of text. • Shift-option-page down extends the selection to the bottom of the next screenful of text. Other keyboard shortcuts: • Option-delete will delete the previous word. • Option-forward delete will delete the next word. • Enter/return will activate the default (outlined) button in dialogs. • Esc/command-period will activate the Cancel button in dialogs. • All other pushbuttons have command key equivalents based on the first letter in the name of the button. Miscellaneous tips: • The watch cursor will spin during any time-consuming, interruptible operations. Use command-period to interrupt the operation. • To edit the text in a SimpleText read-only (ttro) document, simply select and copy the text into a new document. • Open any file by dragging it onto Tex-Edit Plus. • To move a styled Tex-Edit Plus document into another word processor without losing style information, use the clipboard to copy and paste the entire document. • Triple click to select a line. • Quadruple click to select a paragraph. • Option-click on a close box to close all windows. • To delete all occurrences of a string, use the Find/Replace dialog. Just leave the replace field blank and choose Replace All. • Count the number of occurrences of any given string using the Find/Replace dialog. Enter a wild run character in the Replace with box, then choose Replace All and note the number of replacements. • To see all non-printing characters, use the included ASCII fonts. • Tex-Edit’s PICT handling abilities are handy when it comes to cropping screen shots (Command-shift-3) for use in other programs (e.g., Word). Just click-and-drag a selection marquee and choose Copy. • If you run out of memory during a PICT copy operation, try keeping the entire selection marquee visible. • If you notice a delay when opening or resizing large documents, make sure the text is left justified and Use real tabs is off. • A document can be read in the background if Auto-Highlighting is off. You may use all of Tex-Edit’s normal editing functions during the reading session. • To “nest” quoted text (make a quote of a quote), use the Block Options dialog to increase the line length a little before issuing the Block Format command the second time. • To avoid misaligned columns and indents in printouts, leave “Font Substitution” off (in the Page Setup dialog) or use real tabs instead of spaces. • All numeric dialog fields have up/down arrow buttons that allow quick adjustment between allowable field values.