Computer Science, asked by alg24127, 8 months ago

A ____________ line in the document window is called the Cursor or the Insertion Point. *

Blinking.
Standing.
Sleeping.​

Answers

Answered by mmas14
2

Answer:

ur ans is Blinking

Explanation:

The insertion point—also called a cursor—is the blinking line in your document that indicates where text is inserted when you type. Notice the line that indicates the end of your document. ... You cannot move your insertion point below this line.

Answered by rohit6325
0

Answer:

The insertion point—also called a cursor—is the blinking line in your document that indicates where text is inserted when you type. There are several ways to move an insertion point.

Explanation:

The I-beam shows where your mouse pointer is. The blinking insertion point shows where your next word will be once you start typing.

When you are in a Word document, your pointer changes from an arrow (arrow cursor) to an I-beam (I beam cursor).

Once the pointer leaves the Word document to perform a Windows function, it changes back into an arrow (arrow cursor).

Notice the line that indicates the end of your document. You cannot move your insertion point below this line.

Word window with Insertion point and I beam labeled.

Moving the insertion point

To move the insertion point:

Use your mouse to move your insertion point anywhere within the document. Move your mouse until the I-beam is where you want your insertion point to be and click.

OR

Use your arrow keys to move your insertion point up, down, left, or right. These movements move your insertion point one space or line at a time. This method is especially useful if you only need to

move a few spaces or lines back in a document to make a correction.

OR

Hold the Control key and press the up or down arrow keys to jump up or down a paragraph at a time.

OR

Press Page Down (PgDn) to jump down the document one window at a time.

Challenge!

Notice the insertion point at the beginning of the document.

Using the methods described in this lesson, test the insertion point's ability to move.

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