Previously, people could sit in a conference room with a projector for document presentations, work from their multi-monitor desks, or have easy access to printed content for review. Nowadays, an increasing number of users are consuming most of their content on smaller personal screens, such as laptops, tablets, or mobile phones. With these new shortcuts, the Word Product team is making it easier than ever for you to zoom your document to the right level for your screen.
To restore the keyboard shortcut assignments to their original settings, you can head over to the Customize Keyboard Shortcuts help article. Below you will find a table of the command names which you may want to reset.
Note: The Optional and Nonbreaking hyphen commands are in the Common Symbols category of the Customize Keyboard dialog. All other commands can be found in the All Commands category.
If you have a password, it is hashed so you will need to launch the meeting once in the browser and copy it out. Once you have your hashed password, add &pwd= after your conference number (with no spaces).
this is the easy and quick wayBut remember to that it will open the browser and browser will pop up and msg saying "Lunch Meeting In Zoom App" which leads to the opening of zoom app. So if you tick always open with app .You are ready to go.
I like your answer @Seor CMasMas, but instead of a shortcut I'm using a scheduled task to start zoom.exe and using the --url as the arguments, as many of my meetings are recurring. So I want them to automatically pop them up for me, as time is always slipping by when I'm not paying attention.
Zoom may have changed something since these answers were posted. I was unable to get any of the formats for opening a password-locked room open on osX -- hashed, unhashed, using the --url scheme -- zoom would open but not go to the room.
The essential part is that the script parses out three fields from a typical Zoom link: The host, the meeting ID, and the hashed password. Then I just run zoom with the option of a Zoom meeting URL of the format "zoommtg://[host]/join?action=join&confno=[meeting id]&pwd=[password hash]"
The script does a little extra to make sure my DISPLAY is set (in case I'm running this from something like the 'at' queue) and to verify that the URL is in the expected format with a regular expression match.
While using 10.04 and the previous versions I used to put Ctrl+F6 to zoom in and subsequently Ctrl+F7 to zoom out. Now (using 11.10, Unity) I can't even find the options to zoom in and zoom out in the "keyboard shortcuts". I tried "the Magnifier" in the Compiz but really can't understand what is going on right there. There is simple question I would like to ask:
If you have a mouse with a scroll wheel you can set it to zoom the display in Preferences > Tools. This is really useful because with this enabled you can zoom at the same time you do other things with the mouse pointer.
I no longer use the Magic mouse, too unreliable too many batteries. They no longer sell Magic mouse charger etc. I switched to a Kensington wired mouse. and now use the pref: >Tools> use scroll wheel for zoom( don't know what scrubby zoom even means but left it checked.). Works great.
Like Fixx says, you can disable the system level Spotlight keyboard shortcut but I guess they decided some users would find this undesirable since it is global & would affect every app. If there were menu commands in Affinity for zooming in & out, I think it might be possible to use the App Shortcuts section of System Preferences > Keyboard > Shortcuts to override the global Spotlight shortcut only for Affinity, but there isn't so that is moot.
Hello all. I just switched over from AutoCAD Civil 3D 2008 to 2011, and of course am having trouble getting everything set up the way I like it. I usually create a square in model space around what I want to show in the viewport. Then I go to paperspace and do a "zoom window" in the paper space viewport and snap the zoom window to the corners of the square. CAD 2011 doesn't seem to let me do this. I'm pretty sure it is a SETVAR issue, anyone know of the variable that needs to be set to allow me to do this again?
I did this and it still took awhile to "take". I fiddled around with typing "INT" before delineatining my window, then started using F3 as the shortcut. All of a sudden it started doing it on it's own.
Can anyone explain what OSNAPCOORD has to do with snapping in a viewport when useing zoom-window? I always have the change the variable to 0 in order to zoom-window in viewports, but then I have to set it back to 2 in order to do any modeling. With it at 0, you can't move anything without using snaps. I often shift things around orthogonally (or polar-ly, as I always use polar tracking) and at OSNAPCOORD=0, trying this literally does nothing. It's beyond annoying, and make zero sense whatsoever.
Further info. OSNAPCOORD has nothing to do with model/paperspace. If it is set to 1 or 2 now Zoom Window will not use running Osnaps. You would have to enter the Osnap of select it off the rt-clk menu. If it's set to 0. Zoom Window will use the running Osnap. I gleaned that from reading a couple of other posts on the subject.
Allen Jessup
CAD Manager - Designer
Did you find this post helpful? Feel free to Like this post.
Did your question get successfully answered? Then click on the ACCEPT SOLUTION button.
Good tip on the right click menu for quick OSNAPs, but it still doesn't make any sense that allowing the command line to override osnaps would cause the osnaps to do nothing when using that one command, zoom-window. Overriding or not overriding snaps should still allow snaps if they aren't actively being overridden.
I use ZW all the time because of viewports in paper space. Every detail's viewport will eventually be ZW'ed in. We draw all of our details in a mock-paperspace view within model space, which I think is fairly standard, at least based on the different firms I've worked for, once you know where that paperspace viewport will point to, you need to then zoom into that detail box. How else would you zoom into the detail box?
I do things almost exactly as you described. Except I save a View in Modelspace for the area I want in the viewport. I then restore the View in the paperspace viewport. I sometimes draw a polyline around the viewport and use Changespace to move it to Modelspace. Then I can define the View by snapping to the corners.
In ver2018 is a nifty little thing to go one step farther with a view to view port. After creating a the models space view (with the scale you want) in paper space, make view and named (mv;na;) lets you type the name of a model space view to create a viewport from that named view with the scale for the view applied.
Do you have one or more recurring Zoom meetings, like a department meeting, club meeting, online class meeting, or others that always meet in the same Zoom room? Instead of having to search for the email announcing the meeting or opening your calendar to find the link, you can create a simple shortcut on your desktop for the meeting directly. Whether you are on a Windows computer or a Mac, the process is pretty simple.
Next, get all of your windows (browsers, other apps) out of the way and click your right mouse button on the desktop. Choose New, then Shortcut. Use CTRL V to paste the address for the zoom meeting into the address field of the shortcut, then click Next. Give the shortcut a name (does not matter what it is; just name it something that will remind you what it is). Click Ok and your shortcut will be created. You can drag it to whatever spot on the desktop works best for you.
While working with Fiji (ImageJ 1.51p) I often need to open several images taken over the same surface, tile it on the screen and zoom one of them without changing dimensions and location of the target window. However currently this seems to be not possible, as window dimensions change while I am zooming in/out
With this it will be possible to turn on the desired functionality (prevent resizing of windows while zooming in) using the specified key in the square brackets (e.g. F1 key here). The macro will stop once the space bar is pressed.
A foreseeable problem with this is that it will introduce the alt-down changes to anything that happens while the macro is active (e.g. scrolling with mouse wheel alone will go through timepoints rather than channels).
fixing the window size during zooming of an image might be an improvement of the user experience (and could be made optional via Edit > Options > Appearance). Maybe @Wayne has an opinion on that topic as well?
For sure fixing the window size will be great improvement of user experience. Moreover I would say that this option should be set for each window separately instead of a single setting for all windows within IJ session.
As an aside, have you considered using the hand tool to zoom? It seems much more accurate for zooming in to a particular spot when I try, which might prevent you from having to do too many zoom adjustments. Also, would using a rectangular selection to zoom in to a defined segment of the image(s) help at all?
This article was co-authored by wikiHow staff writer, Rain Kengly. Rain Kengly is a wikiHow Technology Writer. As a storytelling enthusiast with a penchant for technology, they hope to create long-lasting connections with readers from all around the globe. Rain graduated from San Francisco State University with a BA in Cinema.
This article has been fact-checked, ensuring the accuracy of any cited facts and confirming the authority of its sources.
This article has been viewed 843,578 times.
Learn more...