Mymail junk quick key macbook pro

My quick key for deleting junk in mymail suddenly stopped working somewhere around the time I was getting excessive junk mail, I can no longer delete or use junk deleting keyboard functions.  Any ideas on how to reset. Could I have gotten some kind of bug?
Thanks,
C

I have recently upgraded from a macbook pro 2009 to a brand new macbook pro retina. it's only a few weeks in and I seem to be getting the same issues, the down key has siezed a number of times and the n key has just got stuck.
It seems to be a physical issue as you can eventually free them up .
I belive the issue may be down to muck getting in the mecahnism, however I don't use the computer in a dusty or dirty enviroment, my laptops kept clean and I did not encounter any issues with my previous macbook pro.
It's verry irritating to pay so much for a device and find such a rediulious fault.
The haswell is quite new and I belive apple constantly make minor revisions, so I'll probably keep it for a few more months and the send it in for a warentee repair, hopefully by then they will have fixed the issue.

Similar Messages

  • F5 and F6 keys (MacBook Pro) do not adjust screen brightness after upgrade to OS X Lion

    Hi All,
    since "upgrading" my MacBook Pro from Snow Leopard to Lion, the F5 and F6 keys for adjusting the monitor brightness do not work anymore! No matter how I set the settings for the monitor, the keys do not work.
    Sometimes, the MacBook now just uses a low brightness and the only way to modify this is to open the system settings and change it there.
    Does anyone know how to fix this so that it works properly (like in Snow Leopard) ?
    Thanks,
    Kristian.

    The screen brightness adjustment is F1 and F2.
    You can also adjust in System Preferences > Displays.
    Regards,
    Captfred

  • How do I customize application shortcut keys Macbook Pro

    Hey Guys,
    I know how to set up shortcut keys...systems preferences>keyboard>applications...but when I attempt to make a shortcut key, for example to open iTunes I used the shortcut command+control+I but when I close iTunes and try to open it using this combination of buttons nothing happens and I don't have any idea why.
    Any help would be great!

    Different applications have their own shortcuts.   A MacBook Pro is a notebook, whereas a Mac Pro is a desktop machine.   Unless the shortcut is made to function across all applications, you will only get it to work in the application you set it up in.  http://startly.com/ is a popular third party software used for keyboard shortcuts.  Note, they appear not yet to be ready for Mountain Lion.

  • Quick Question Macbook Pro 15.4"

    Hi,
    Need some help with my mac what should i do???
    THE mac IS AT THE MOMENT WORKING BUT UNFORTUNATELY SOMETIMES IT IS FAULTY (SCREEN TURNS BLACK AND NEEDS A RESTART) also WHEN IT SWITCHES TO THE AMD CHIP AS THERE IS A PROBLEM WITH THE GPU.
    What would i have to repair and how much?
         Please help
    Thank you

    Not sure about your MacBook Pro model, though there was the NVIDIA GeForce 8600M GT graphics processor repair extension program which was ended Dec.7 2012.
    MacBook Pro: Distorted video or no video issues

  • TS3276 how do i filter out junk mail on macbook pro

    is there a way to filter the junk mail i recieve

    You can add rules to apply to incoming messages - for example, I throw everything from senders that are not in my address book into the Junk mailbox.  From there, I can easily scan the senders and subject lines to see if the message might be something I do want to look at, and the rest I toss - junk mail can be erased without looking at it.

  • Macbook Pro Won't Do Lion Restore From USB

    Hi Users,
    I am exhausted. Graduate school is starting again. I have been to way too many forums and I am about to throw this piece of junk called a MacBook Pro in the trash and call it a lost. I will tell you why I am so frustrated:
    1. Wanted to reload Mac OSX + bootcamp to install W7. Did a bunch of things on another forum that just made things worse.
    2. Now my mac is so jacked up I am trying to do a OSX restore on my USB.
    Problem Description:
    My macbook lion will not restore from the app store. I put the USB in the computer. I get to the restore Lion window and then it tells me that it will take 99
    hours to reload. I do not believe it is even contacting the store. I don't want a bunch of nonsense about how my wifi isn't working or something like that.
    I would like to know how to get into the terminal and just freaking reset everything so that even the lion restore on my USB would freaking work.
    I am going to take this piece of crap into the store tomorrow, but I have to say, as a computer science major. This is a piece of ####. I can't believe I even
    used to be a mac fan boy. This diskless stuff was a great idea, but makes doing major restores a pain. Also, I tried doing a disk DVD restore and even that is jacked up. Sigh...
    Frustrated Geek. Thanks for your patience all. I am frustrated at the machine, but not you all.

    Can you give some specifics about your situation.
    Which MacBook Pro do you have? Did it ship with Lion or is it a pre-Lion model? Do you have the Lion installer on a USB key? Do you have a backup of your MacBook Pro data in case you need to reformat your drive? Do you have a fast internet connection?
    What have you attempted so far to restore your OSX Lion partition?
    Have you started up from the Recovery Partition? If so, did you have any success downloading Lion from the App store?
    Users here are generally helpful if you can provide a little more information.

  • My MacBook pro wont wake up from sleep. The screen is blank at all times, but I can hear the fan for 5 sec then everything stops. Please help! I don't kno what to do.

    My MacBook pro is about 3 yrs old. It is a 2008 model right before the new design came out. Recently I closed it up which puts it to sleep and a couple minutes later when I opened it up the screen stayed blank but could hear the fan running but then the power clicked like it was shutting down and I could hear nothing more. My power supply is working and I have already tried resetting it. Can anyone help me? I don't live exactly near a Mac store to get help.

    Before resorting to an LB change-out, try this, as it has fixed many of the "silver-key" Macbook Pros with wake-from-sleep issues:
    1) To get the computer running, do an SMC reset. Instructions here:
    http://support.apple.com/kb/HT3964
    Your MBP model uses the first option under the subhead, "Resetting the System Management Controller (SMC)"
    2) If you get it running, go to System Preferences > Network and select your Airport connection
    3) In the result main pane, click the "Advanced..." button.
    4) You should be looking at a window with multiple tabs at the top; the "Airport" tab (far left) should be active---if not, make it so.
    5) There is a panel showing "Prefered Networks." Use the "minus" button below that window to eliminate any networks that you don't need to access on more than a weekly basis. I'm down to two: the home Airport Extreme Base Station and the network for a museum at which I volunteer once a week.
    5) Click "OK" and close System Preferences.
    Now try letting it sleep and see it if wakes up.
    When this happened to my Late 2007 MBP, I used Console to read system.log and found that, on waking, the compuer was looking for the wireless network at a lodge where I'd stayed weeks earlier and miles away. Clear the morass of old networks and keeping the list short has completely cured my wake-from-sleep issues.
    The steps I listed take less time to do than to read, and are within the ability even of novice Mac users.
    If that doesn't work, you may need to seek professional help. If you take it to an Apple Store and they recommend a logic board replacement, ask about a "Depot Repair." Instead of replacing the logic board on-site (which will whack you to the tune of US$700-1100), they send the computer to a central Apple refurb facility that fixes whatever they find wrong for a flat fee of about US$315 (last time someone reported using the service here). Turnaround is about one working week, and people who have taken of this service have reported being very pleased with the outcome.
    You don't show a geographic location. This service may not be available if you are outside North America.

  • Linksys WCG200 and Macbook Pro - local transfer rates of 0.5~1MB/s ??

    Hi all, I got quite an annoying problem with extremely slow transfer speeds in a local, mac to mac, network setup.
    My setup:
    WCG200 cable modem/wireless router combo
    - allowed for mixed a/b/g speeds)
    - firewall off
    - secured with WEP 64-bit key
    Macbook Pro C2D connected to WCG200 wirelessly
    - interfere robustness on
    - 4 bar strength,
    - using 64-bit WEP key
    Mac Mini connected to WCG200 wired
    When I transfer files locally (MBP~mini) it literally moves at the pace of 0.5~1MB/s (megabytes) whereas my old, cheap (but dead) viewsonic averaged around 6~10MB/s (used WPA encryption).
    I called Linksys and to my surprise they told me they didn't support mac file sharing.
    Any suggestions?
    (listening to shared MP3s between machines cuts out, not to mention videos)
    MBPC2D $2499 option.   Mac OS X (10.4.8)  

    Well,
    Yeah i guess this is one way to isolate the problem, and identify whether its the wireless card or the router itself.
    Have tried it for a short while at my friends place, who has a Belkin 802.11b router. The disconnection did not happen over there. Then thinking of swapping my Wireless card with the one of my friend, this maybe help in isolating the card problem. Then thinking of chaging the router itself.
    Anyways thanks again,
    Regards,
    S.F.Hasan.

  • "All windows" function crashing macbook pro

    Hi,
    I'm having problems with the "All Windows" function that is on the F3 key (macbook pro mid 2010 on Snow Leopard) that I put in my active screen corners or Hot corners as I thought they were called. I bound the "All Windows" function to my bottom left corner and find myself occasionally crashing the whole computer if I use it when I have a few applications open. Sometimes it happens when I have a lot open and sometimes not so much i.e. Safari, Chrome, Skype (with no calls going) and itunes. Sometimes I feel I do an action too abruptly and it crashes, say I open a page in a browser thats still loading, go straight to "all windows" to go see something else and the screen goes black and any noise that was playing keeps skipping. The only way out is to reboot.
    I remember having an issue with gfxcardstatus when I upgraded from v2.1, in which my screen would go black with a line of pixels up top that was screwy. The rest of the computer was fine. Reboot wasn't necessary to fix that. Once I reverted to v2.1 all was fine again. I don't know if gfxcardstatus has anything to do with what I'm dealing with currently but as far as I can remember thats the only problem i've had with this computer until now.
    Otherwise I also upgraded from 4Gb of RAM to 8 back in september but have only been having this issue for the past few months. I don't know if it's my RAM that maybe be faulty.
    All that I know is that "All Windows" function recently crashed the computer. I'm not sure if it does it with my other hot corners which are bound to "Spaces" since I don't recall what I was doing when I crashed other times (more than a dozen times).
    Any insight would be greatly appreciated.
    Thanks

    I've been verifying Activity Monitor while using the "All windows" function and its CPU usage (Process name of  WindowServer) jumps to 10-15% when I use the function. Could it be just that simple that the computer just crashes if this were not enough CPU available when I use "All windows" or is my RAM or computer faulty for crashing at that CPU jump.

  • My macbook pro broke down way too many times!

    Hi
    I bought my macbook pro in 2007 so it's been 3 years and my applecare is ready to expire.
    and within that 3 years, my macbook pro has gone to get it fixed for more than 6 times. Anything that you can imagine, broke down.
    Logic board, fans, speakers, keyboards, usb plug-ins, software issue, hard drive broke down twice, battery replaced, charger replaced, screen replaced, my screens bent due to heat, part of my comp is melted due to heat too, and etc.
    I study graphic design in university right now. and this piece of junk is hunting me everynight because these problems happen over night. I would turn my computer off ok, and when I wake up, somethings always wrong. I'm always scared and backing my stuff because I don't know when this piece of junk will break down.It's really stressing me out.
    Today, I woke up and turned my macbook pro like usually, and my screens black but everything else is running. Again, another fixing problem (heard that its due to the nvidia graphic issue)
    so I am really upset and ****** off more so. I've gone to the applestore at least 10 times already and everytime I go, they are very cold and rude to me.
    so I talked to the manager last time when my computer broke down saying, I am really upset and ****** off about your customer service and this stupid junk. I lost alot of my files and was late to submit my works due to this stupid junk. What are you going to do? and all they said was I'm sorry we understand. Clearly they dont understand. and I saw alot of my friends who got new laptops after breaking down once with similar problem as mine. but why am I not getting a new laptop? is there a way to fix this problem? or am I gonna live with this comp till i buy a new one?
    please help me.

    I would tend to agree with your points here. (Except that it is not "a piece of junk").
    My macbook pro is also from 2007 (august) and has had a number of different problems - mostly due to overheating.
    Added to these problems in Ireland is that Apple do not have an official mac store here ... so it has to go to a service provider each time. That's more than likely 1+ weeks away each time it needs to be sent away for repair.
    One time I sent it back they replaced the screen with the incorrect resolution so it was away for almost 3 weeks in total. When it got back the screen squeaked when I was opening it. I called Apple (luckily I have 3 year applecare) but they told me to deal directly with the partner service provider. I didn't feel this was acceptable because I purchased the Apple Care from Apple - not the service provider.
    I almost had to pay for shipping each time but I argued with them on the phone. I don't feel this is acceptable level of service.
    After the third time with something broken on my MBP I requested a new machine. They ignored me.
    I disagree that the MBP is "a piece of junk". It is not. But it does have problems. Overheating seems to be its biggest problem and that leads to other faults. The thing that Apple does not seem to see is that the overheating leads to long-term damage but by the time this long-term damage becomes obvious the Apple Care is gone so the customer is left to fend for themselves.
    Apple service in Ireland is a terrible setup. Apologies if I have hi-jacked your thread but I am also angry.

  • Help me decide: 30" Cinema hooked to MacBook Pro vs. 24" iMac

    I'm a daytrader and I'm looking to move my trading environment to Macs.
    A month ago I bought a MacBook Pro (first Mac ever) and planned on buying the 24" iMac. In short, I need as much screen real estate as possible to display quotes and charts using every mm of screen space with the smallest font I can possibly see.
    Now I'm wondering if I should go with the 30" Cinema instead of a 24" iMac off the MacBook. If I go with this option, I would be disconnecting the display daily (I work from home and like to retire to the couch in the evenings with the MacBook).
    In terms of Pros and Cons, obviously the Cinema means one less computer to maintain (good), yet one less computer to fall back on (bad).
    What else should I consider? Any advice would be much appreciated. Upfront cost differential isn't a major issue.
    Thanks in advance.

    Screen real estate is the key :
    MacBook Pro + 30" (extended desktop mode) :
    2560x1600 + 1440x900 = 5 392 000 pixels
    24"imac :
    1920x1200 = 2 304 000 pixels
    So, you can fit twice as many quotes with the first option.

  • What is best way to speed up my macbook pro

    what is the best way to speed up, get rid of junk on a macbook pro?

    How to maintain a Mac
    Make two or more backups of all your files
    One backup is not enough to be safe. A copy of a backup doesn't count as another backup; all backups must be made directly from the original data.
    Keep at least one backup off site at all times in case of disaster. Backing up to a cloud-data service is one way to accomplish this, but don't rely exclusively on such backups.
    In fact, don’t rely exclusively on any single backup method, such as Time Machine.
    If you get an indication that a backup has failed, don't ignore it.
    Keep your software up to date
    In the App Store or Software Update preference pane (depending on the OS version), you can configure automatic notifications of updates to OS X and other Mac App Store products. Some third-party applications from other sources have a similar feature, if you don’t mind letting them phone home. Otherwise you have to check yourself on a regular basis.
    Keeping up to date is especially important for complex software that modifies the operating system, such as device drivers. Don't install such modifications unless they're absolutely necessary. Remove them when they are no longer needed. Before installing any Apple update, you must check that all system modifications that you use are compatible. Incompatibility with third-party software is by far the most common cause of difficulties with system updates.
    Don't install crapware
    ...such as “themes,” "haxies," “add-ons,” “toolbars,” “enhancers," “optimizers,” “accelerators,” "boosters," “extenders,” “cleaners,” "doctors," "tune-ups," “defragmenters,” “firewalls,” "barriers," “guardians,” “defenders,” “protectors,” most “plugins,” commercial "virus scanners,” "disk tools," or "utilities." With very few exceptions, such stuff is useless or worse than useless. Above all, avoid any software that purports to change the look and feel of the user interface.
    It's not much of an exaggeration to say that the whole "utility" software industry for the Mac is a fraud on consumers. The most extreme examples are the "CleanMyMac," "TuneUpMyMac," and “MacKeeper” scams, but there are many others.
    As a rule, you should avoid software that changes the way other software works. Plugins for Photoshop and similar programs are an obvious exception to this rule. Safari extensions, and perhaps the equivalent for other web browsers, are a partial exception. Most are safe, and they're easy to get rid of if they don't work. Some may cause the browser to crash or otherwise malfunction. Some are malicious. Use with caution, and install only well-known extensions from relatively trustworthy sources, such as the Safari Extensions Gallery.
    Only install software that is useful to you, not (as you imagine) to the computer. For example, a word processor is useful for writing. A video editor is useful for making movies. A game is useful for fun. But a "cache cleaner" isn't useful for anything. You didn't buy a computer so you could clean caches.
    Never install any third-party software unless you know how to uninstall it. Otherwise you may create problems that are very hard to solve. Do not rely on "utilities" such as "AppCleaner" and the like that purport to remove software.
    Don't install bad, conflicting, or unnecessary fonts
    Whenever you install new fonts, use the validation feature of the built-in Font Book application to make sure the fonts aren't defective and don't conflict with each other or with others that you already have. See the built-in help and this support article for instructions.
    Deactivate or remove fonts that you don't really need to speed up application launching.
    Avoid malware
    "Malware" is malicious software that circulates on the Internet. This kind of attack on OS X was once so rare that it was hardly a concern, but it's now increasingly common and dangerous.
    There is some built-in protection against malware, but you can’t rely on it—the attackers are always at least one day ahead of the defense. You can’t rely on third-party "anti-virus" products for protection either. What you can rely on is common-sense awareness—not paranoia, which only makes you more vulnerable.
    Never install software from an untrustworthy or unknown source. If in doubt, do some research. Any website that prompts you to install a “codec” or “plugin” that comes from the same site, or an unknown site, is untrustworthy. Software with a corporate brand, such as Adobe Flash Player, must come directly from the developer's website. No intermediary is acceptable, and don’t trust links unless you know how to parse them. Any file that is automatically downloaded from the web, without your having requested it, should go straight into the Trash. A web page that tells you that your computer has a “virus,” or that anything else is wrong with it, is a scam.
    In OS X 10.7.5 or later, downloaded applications and Installer packages that have not been digitally signed by a developer registered with Apple are blocked from loading by default. The block can be overridden, but think carefully before you do so.
    Because of recurring security issues in Java, it’s best to disable it in your web browsers, if it’s installed. Few websites have Java content nowadays, so you won’t be missing much. This action is mandatory if you’re running any version of OS X older than 10.6.8 with the latest Java update. Note: Java has nothing to do with JavaScript, despite the similar names. Don't install Java unless you're sure you need it. Most people don't.
    Don't fill up your disk or SSD
    A common mistake is adding more and more large files to your home folder until you start to get warnings that you're out of space, which may be followed in short order by a startup failure. This is more prone to happen on the newer Macs that come with an internal SSD instead of the traditional hard drive. The drive can be very nearly full before you become aware of the problem.
    While it's not true that you should or must keep any particular percentage of space free, you should monitor your storage use and make sure you're not in immediate danger of using it up. According to Apple documentation, you need at least 9 GB of free space on the startup volume for normal operation.
    If storage space is running low, use a tool such as OmniDiskSweeper to explore the volume and find out what's taking up the most space. Move seldom-used large files to secondary storage.
    Relax, don’t do it
    Besides the above, no routine maintenance is necessary or beneficial for the vast majority of users; specifically not “cleaning caches,” “zapping the PRAM,” "resetting the SMC," “rebuilding the directory,” "defragmenting the drive," “running periodic scripts,” “dumping logs,” "deleting temp files," “scanning for viruses,” "purging memory," "checking for bad blocks," "testing the hardware," or “repairing permissions.” Such measures are either completely pointless or are useful only for solving problems, not for prevention.
    To use a Mac effectively, you have to free yourself from the Windows mindset that every computer needs regular downtime for maintenance such as "defragging" and "registry cleaning." Those concepts do not apply to the Mac platform.
    A well-designed computing device is not something you should have to think about much. It should be an almost transparent medium through which you communicate, work, and play. If you want a machine that needs a lot of attention just to keep going, use a PC, or collect antique cars.
    The very height of futility is running an expensive third-party application called “Disk Warrior” when nothing is wrong, or even when something is wrong and you have backups, which you must have. Disk Warrior is a data-salvage tool, not a maintenance tool, and you will never need it if your backups are adequate. Don’t waste money on it or anything like it.

  • MacBook Pro power adapters dying, keys frying, strange heat problem

    I've got a very frustrating and mysterious major situation going on with my MBPro. I'm living in Peru in the jungle. I've got a basic electric hookup that's caused no problems for the few electrical devices I've got: small dorm-size fridge, a lightbulb, speaker system, iPhone, iPod, and, until recently a MacBook I had borrowed temporarily from a friend here. I recently visited the states and returned with my MacBook Pro which I need for work down here. Thusly my troubles began.
    I noticed pretty quickly the power adapter got super hot, could easily fry an egg on it sometimes. One night I unplugged the Magsafe adapter from the MBP for safekeeping, slept, and in the a.m., the adapter (unplugged from the Mac but still plugged into the wall outlet) was terribly hot. Does this make any sense? It gets stranger & worse...
    I used the Mac later that day and within a couple hours two of the keyboard keys stopped working for good (I was later able to remap these keys using a 3rd party program). The next day the Magsafe adapter stopped working. Certainly heat had something to do with it, despite the fact that MagSafes have built-in safeguards whereby they (should) shut down temporarily if overheated. But this sucker was dead.
    A friend from the states visited me 3 weeks later and brought two more adapters ordered from Amazon.com, each a different generic brand that had good customer reviews.
    The first, which looks just like a MagSafe, worked fine but died in a week. Again, it would get superhot not even plugged into the MBP (like the other one). I should note the MBP also was always hot to super hot. Also the large plastic square power hub of the adapter, even after it died, would get hot if plugged in, it just wouldn't power the Mac.
    The other (3rd) adapter worked for awhile, and its rectangular power bar hub would only get a little hot. But the Mac would still get insanely hot, as did the very top of the adapter plug - the part with the teeth that go into the MBP. Within 2 weeks, the adapter wouldn't work unless I applied pressure on it against the Mac. Then it stopped working even with pressure applied.
    Here's where it gets even stranger:
    What I noticed was that the two outermost of the five teeth on the plug had been somehow pushed further in, such that they couldn't make contact with the MBP (I guess the pressure I was manually applying helped this for awhile until the teeth sank even much further in). How and why in the world did this happen?
    Desperate, I brought the two adapters to an electrician, and had him combine the good teeth end piece from the previous generic Magsafe with the adapter whose teeth caved in. Viola, it worked...but just for three days. Amazingly the two outer teeth of the new hybrid plug ALSO retreated and couldn't make contact. Furthermore, I noticed some dried plastic juice gunk around them and concluded that the heat of the connection to the Mac was somehow mysteriously melting the glue around these teeth and also causing them to push further into the adapter more. I know: sounds almost impossible. But this is what happened, TWICE.
    Obviously there is an overall problem here, one which concerns heat, among whatever else. It's hot here in the jungle. While my other appliances have had no problem, I've certainly noticed the fridge and speaker subwoofer system run hot. But the electricity reading is normal, and I have a current regulator stabilizing the electrical flow. And the previous MacBook (not Pro) had no problems. And yes the fans on the MBP work. And in general the electricity here works fine to run people's electronics, including some very large freezer units and plasma TVs.
    I'm at a loss as to what to do and to how to identify the problem beyond "heat". If I don't get the MBP working normally I can, in effect, no longer be here as it's essential to my work. Therefore any help would be most awesome and greatly appreciated. Thanks.

    1) Make sure you have the right adapter type for your model of MacBook. There are 45w, 60w, and 85w adapters. Pro's either take the 60 or 85 watt.
    2) Most 3rd party adapters I have tried are junk, junk, junk. They quit working, have melted, have fried my macbook, and even caught on fire.
    Now what it sounds like to me is maybe your are having an issue with a loose magsafe board. This was a big problem with the white macbooks( I realize that is not what yours is). The MagSafe board (part where your charger plugs into the computer) gets pushed in ever so slightly and if the connection between your adapter and the board is not precise it can cause issues of anything from overcharging and shutting off the adapter, overheating, damaging your Magsafe board, and making the adapter useless.  The best way to tell if it is this is if you have to wiggle your adapter to get it to charge correctly. (Note I have never seen the happen with the T-shaped MagSafe 1.0 but I wouldn't doubt it, but I know it happens with the MagSafe 2.0 L shaped adapters.)

  • Is there a way one can safely remove the keys on a macbook pro lap top and clean under them without causing damage? Or is it best to just take it in for that.... say if one spilled a small amount of maple syrup? Help please.

    Is there a way to remove, clean, and safely re-affix the keys on a macbook pro without causing damage.... or is it best to let the Pro's do it?

    i would let the pros do it. ive dismantled my mbp before and its a pain with all the little parts. you basically have to remove everything from the bottom up (logic board, ram, all cables, cd drive) to get to the keyboard.
    how much junk you got under those keys? the space between the metal and keys are small, unlike a pc laptop (though most pc laptops have easier keyboards to remove) .

  • Anyone know how to use a 'home' and 'end' key on the Macbook pro keyboard?

    I had a pc before, and the keyboard had home and end keys on the keyboard for quickly moving cursor to end or beginning of word or sentence.  I can't figure out if there is something like that on the Macbook pro.  It would be really helpful.  So does anyone know if there is those keys and if so what do i use?
    I'd appreciate any help. 
    Thanks

    see if any of this works for you
    On a smaller keyboard, such as the wireless, or on portables, you can use fn- left arrow for home and fn- right arrow for end.
    On a Mac, 'home and 'end' take you to the beginning and the end of document, respectively. Getting to the beginning or end of a line is done with cmd- leftarrow and cmd- rightarrow. Emacs shortcuts, such a ctrl-a and ctrl- e also work in most places, where the app is done right.

Maybe you are looking for

  • How to show Descriptions of Query on a Web template(statistics)

    hi I have created a custom Query which shows data for certain queries running, but the data keeps on showing me technical name of the queries, I want my report to show description so it makes sense to my manager as they donu2019t understand technical

  • Using the display on something else than a computer

    Is there any way to use the 20-inch Cinema Display on something else than a computer? Such as using it as an external monitor for my HD camera? I'm shooting a short film, and I was wondering if such a display could serve as a video assist. Thanks.

  • Photos downloaded appear only "showing: added by (photos only)" - do not appear in albums or grid. Why?

    I downloaded 150 photos today but they only appear in  "showing: added by (photos only)" - do not appear in albums or grid. Why?

  • Spl G/L Down Payment Requst Problem

    Hi SAP, I have a issue in Spl GL "F"--> I have given my Recon a/c as well Down Payment Request G/L also and in properties i assiged as Noted Item with Target spl GL is F But when i am trying to post in F-47 Its saying "spl GL F Not defined for down p

  • Discoverer In Apps Mode Help

    I am currently working on a project using oracle discoverer and it is being run in "apps mode". This is the first time I have worked practically with discoverer and I am unfamiliar with the standard apps EUL. I understand that the EUL uses a number o