A quick text box tutorial is included in the Instructions file, included with purchase.
Stardew has a very short, skippable intro, and provides simple tutorials with
quick text boxes.
Not exact matches
By having wide margins (referred to as gutters in the book design world) and spacing, bullets and even
boxed in pieces to highlight particular
text, it invites the reader to read instead of taking inventory via a
quick scan and moving on.
Open it up and you'll find a playing board that clearly shows where every deck of cards is supposed to sit, and in the two top corners there's small
boxes of
text that provide
quick summaries of how to set the game up and how a player's turn works, which is a nice touch since it saves you digging out the frankly quite boring looking rulebook.
When you do find someone to talk to, instead of the traditional
text box found in other RPGs, you get a
quick FMV clip of a person talking.
Players can use the R1 button to crouch, which, when using the helpful map points, should have got me through the beginning stage
quicker, but I looked for something above on the ceiling and climbed the
boxes instead of finding cover as the
text prompt instructed.
To view the Field dialog
box, on the Insert tab, in the
Text group, click
Quick Parts, and then click Field.
If you select a format in the Field dialog
box (Insert tab,
Text group,
Quick Parts command, Field command), Microsoft Word inserts a corresponding date - time picture switch.
- Fixed statusbar battery percentages showing 0 after reboot when extended battery tile is enabled - QuickSettings management: — fixed extended battery tile for Android 4.2 (AOSP only)-- don't apply «All caps»
text style to extended battery tile to always show mV instead of MV — allow tile reordering activity on non-touchscreen devices - Updated layout in UNC
quick search
box to allow inputting non-English characters (thanks to momomok)- Launcher tweaks: adjusted for compatibility with GNL 3.5 - Navigation bar: added option to show Android L icons (thanks to bgcngm)- Pie: slightly increased trigger swipe angle - Updated Russian translations (thanks to gaich)- Updated Chinese (Traditional) translations (thanks to momomok)- Updated Chinese (Simplified) translations (thanks to liveasx)- Updated Italian translations (thanks to pesa1234)- Updated French translation (thanks to ch - vox)- Updated Polish translations (thanks to xtrem007)- Updated German translations (thanks to LibertyMarine)- Updated Spanish translations (thanks to jvbferrer)- Updated Korean translations (thanks to SDKoongchi)- Updated Japanese translations (thanks to WedyDQ10)- Updated Portuguese (PT) translation (thanks to bgcngm)- Updated Slovak and Czech translations
According to Apple iOS 11, coming in September or October, introduces powerful new features for iPad, including: — a new customisable Dock that provides
quick access to frequently used apps and documents from any screen; — improved multitasking, including a redesigned app switcher that brings Spaces to iOS, making it easier to move between apps or pairs of active apps, used in Split View and now Slide Over; — the new Files app that keeps everything in one place, whether files are stored locally, in iCloud Drive or across other providers like
Box, Dropbox and more; — Multi-Touch Drag and Drop, which is available across the system to move
text, photos and files from one app to another, anywhere on the screen; — a new document scanner in Notes, which lets users easily scan single or multi-page documents, removes shadows and uses powerful image filters to enhance readability; and — deeper integration with Apple Pencil, with support for inline drawing to write along
text in Notes and Mail, Instant Markup to easily sign documents, annotate PDFs or draw on screenshots, and a new Instant Notes feature, which opens Notes from the Lock Screen by simply tapping Apple Pencil on the display.
From a user perspective, the new gesture support,
text to speech engine, and slick new
Quick Search
Box are probably of more interest.