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OFS Readme

OFS Readme

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One Finger Snap A right mouse button for one button mice Thank you for trying One Finger Snap by Old Jewel Software. One Finger Snap is a Preference Pane that brings up the contextual menu whenever you click and hold the mouse button down. This means that you can do everything with a single- button mouse that you can do with a 2- button mouse in Mac OS X. System Requirements: One Finger Snap requires Mac OS X 10.3 or later to run. It also makes use of the "Enable Assistive Devices" feature in the Universal Access preference pane. Installation: To install One Finger Snap: • double-click the OneFingerSnap.prefpane file. • Your System Preferences application will load right away. • A sheet may appear asking if you want to install One Finger Snap just for the current user or for all users on your computer. If you aren't sure, just choose "Install for this user only" and click the "Install" button. • If you see the default list of preference panes, then look for and click the 1 Finger Snap icon. • From now on, simply open System Preferences and click the 1 Finger Snap icon to access One Finger Snap. Starting One Finger Snap: To start One Finger Snap: • Open the One Finger Snap preference pane. • Click the button labeled "Start One Finger Snap" Stopping One Finger Snap: To turn One Finger Snap off: • Open the One Finger Snap preference pane. • Click the button labeled "Stop One Finger Snap" Turning on Access for Assistive Devices: One Finger Snap uses Mac OS X's accessibility routines to know whether the mouse is currently over a screen element that can be right-clicked (like a text field) or one that should not be right-clicked (like a scroll bar). If you find that One Finger Snap is clicking at times when it shouldn't, then you can turn on Access for Assistive Devices. • Open System Preferences. • Click the icon for the Universal Access preference pane. It has a blue icon with a person inside it. • Check the checkbox labeled "Enable access for assistive devices" Using One Finger Snap: You can use One Finger Snap in any application that offers a contextual menu. Instead of right-clicking (or control-clicking), just click and hold the mouse button down until you hear a sound like the sound of a finger snapping (the screen will also flash briefly at the same time). Then release your mouse button and the contextual menu will appear. If you move your mouse outside of the current window while you're holding down the mouse button, then One Finger Snap realizes that you're performing a drag and it doesn't bring up the contextual menu. Selecting with One Finger Snap: One Finger Snap will let you use all the selection methods you're used to. • Double-click a word, but keep the mouse button down for the second click, and that word will be highlighted and t…

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