1Jan

Open Song How To Set Osx Display For Double Preview

In the “System > Display” menu the screen position, display size (enlargement ratio), display orientation, display method of the multi-display, and main/sub display can be set. If you scroll down to the bottom of the “Display” menu there is an “advanced display settings” link.

On a side note, often times using the copy/paste method, I end up with numbers stored as text or other data that Microsoft Excel cannot convert to a number using any of the standard methods: - Copy, paste special, Add 0 to an array - Copy, paste special, Multiply by 1 - use formula '=substitute([any cell reference],char(160),char(32)) which should replace HTML space with standard space or - use formula '=substitute([any cell reference],char(160),'') which should replace HTML space [char(160)] with nothing Are there other ways of overcoming these character and formatting issues? Excel for mac countif. For data in cells A1 to A10, the standard formula is: rank(A1,$A$1:$A$10,0)+Countif($A$1:A1,A1)+1 As seen in screenshots, the same formula uniquely ranks two cells both with the value of $0.2 but fails to create unique ranks for two cells both with value $3.2. The second issue derives from using the 'Rank' function with the 'countif' function to uniquely rank a set of data (no ties). So far, my experience has been that it is only slightly more inefficient to hand tab all of the data vs the lengthy process of deconstructing the myriad issues posed by the conversion process. Are there ways to avoid them at all in the future?

This is one thing I don't quite get it for the Mac: why is it so hard to start a slideshow? The most often way is, I have several photos on the Desktop or in Downloads, and I double click to see the first one -- and no, it is not the one I want, so I want to see the 2nd, 3rd, 4th, etc. At least on Win 7, that's super easy just by pressing the right arrow on the keyboard and that's it. On the Mac, is there a super easy way? I don't want to highlight this and that, and then choose 'Slideshow' from some where I can't be sure of, or change the view to the 'flip through' view, because I might not necessarily want to change the view style for the folder at the moment -- I just want to browse through a few photos -- is there a super quick way?

As other 'fellow' users, we have the same right as you do to use our own phraseology and/or to express our opinions as long as we do not violate the ToU here. If you do not care for someone's response, simply ignore it, or, if you believe it to be incorrect, post the correct answer addressing the person who asked the question. Movies Here is a link to the ToU. Criticizing posters' responses, especially considering this is a dormant 6 months old thread, is not helpful.

In Leopard and later versions (up to El Capitan), select the files you want in the Finder and press the spacebar to invoke QuickLook. You can then use the arrow keys to cycle through them. If you click the full-screen icon, Finder and QuickLook displays the slideshow. You get extra animation in some os versions if Finder is showing files in cover-flow layout. In OS X Yosemite 10.10 and later, the maximise (full-screen) button is in the upper left-hand corner. Then press 'play' to start the slideshow.

For OS X 10.9 to 10.7 the full screen icon is top right. In Tiger, there is a 'Slideshow' option in the context menu in the Finder.

In Panther and earlier, it is indeed several steps before you can get a slideshow.