That depends on the application. Commonly it is the F5 key, like in Word and Excel. Ctrl-G can be used as the shortcut.
Press the F5 key or Ctrl-G and you will open the Go To command. You can then pick the cell you want to go to.
Yes you can determine the function of a function Key. You must access the registry and make the change.
Either press the carat button followed by a 3 or go to the math function and select cubed.
state is the key function of energy
to delete
you push the fn key next to the Ctrl/control key. You hold down that button and push the arrow key up for the brightness to go up and the down key for it to go down. If the brightness doesn't go up then its probably on full brightness.
it is when you have a virius on your computer so you press that button so the virus can go away
No, the sentry key (skim) is a learned function that can not be removed.No, the sentry key (skim) is a learned function that can not be removed.
That is the "INSERT" key.
Depending on the system you are using, the shortcut key to go to the beginning of a row will vary. If you are using a Windows machine, you can press the home button, or function + left arrow key. If you are using a Mac, you would press command + left arrow key or control + A.
Press the function key to enter the time mode. Press and hold the function key for 3 seconds to enter the setting mode. While the "hour" digits are flashing, press the function key to set the hour (each press moves forward 1 hour). When the hour is set, press on the function key for 3 seconds until the "minute" digits start flashing. Press the function key to set the minutes. When the minute is set, press on the function key for 3 seconds until the "month" digits start flashing. Press the function key to set the month. When the month is set, press on the function key for 3 seconds until the "day" digits start flashing. Press the function key to set the day. Release the function key for 30 seconds to exit the setting mode.
The Fn button is the function key. A key that works like a shift key to activate the second function on a dual-purpose key.