A program's window must be selected to see its menus. Menus vary from program to program however, the steps used in choosing menu items are the same for all Amiga software. For example, you can rename a disk or copy a file by choosing items from the Workbench menus. Most Amiga programs have menus for some or all of their functions. These commands control the actions of the program in the currently selected window. Menus are lists of commands and options displayed on a screen by holding down the mouse menu button. This lets you drag the screen, regardless of the mouse pointer position. To drag a screen when its title bar is covered by widows or not on the visible part of the display, hold down the left Amiga key and then the selection button. If a screen is larger than a monitor's display area, you can drag it up or down or side to side so that you can see all areas of the screen. To expose a screen, you can drag any screens that are in front of it down. If your Workbench screen, a terminal program screen, and a text editor screen are open all at the same time, you can see parts of each screen by dragging them into view. A screen cannot be dragged so that the bottom of the screen rises above the bottom of the monitor display.The Amiga can be set to scroll the unseen areas of the screen into view when you move the pointer to the edges of the viewable area. Screens larger than the monitor's display area can be opened.A screen with no title bar can be dragged using the qualifier key set in the IControl Preferences editor, described in Chapter 5. Screens that do not might still respond to mouse clicks in the depth area. Most screens have a title bar that you can use to move them.Only one window on one screen at a time can accept keyboard or mouse input.Items cannot be dragged between screens, although the mouse pointer moves freely from screen to screen.Use left Amiga+N to bring the Workbench screen to the front, regardless of how many other screens are open.Use left Amiga+M to page through open screens.When working with screens, remember these helpful hints: To view and access screens that are covered by others, drag the frontmost screen down or use gadgets or keyboard shortcuts to depth-arrange them. New screens normally open on top of other screens, covering them. Several screens can be open at the same time. The Workbench screen, shown in Figure 3-1, is the first thing displayed when you turn on your Amiga or following reboot.
Amiga workbench adf pack full#
(For more display mode information, see Chapter 7.)Ī screen is always at least the full width of the monitor display. Different display modes are used for different purposes and present different memory and processing loads on the system. Screen resolution is determined by the number of pixels - the tiny dots of light that make up the screen display - placed horizontally and diagonally. The screen is an area of the monitor display with a given display mode and set of properties, including the resolution, size, and number of colors. A screen is one of the key features of the Amiga's display system.