Apple IIe Card User Manual
Page 178
C
cards
See accessory card.
Character Set setting
A setting in the General
Controls panel that you use to choose between
normal text (light characters on a dark background)
and inverse text (dark characters on a light
background).
x
key
The Command key. A key on the bottom row of
the Macintosh keyboard that, when held down while
another key is pressed, causes a command to take
effect. The
x key is equivalent to the
K
K (Open
Apple) key on Apple IIe keyboards.
x
-Shift-1
A combination keystroke that ejects any disk
from the built-in floppy disk drive. With Macintosh
computers that have two built-in disk drives,
x-Shift-1 ejects any disk from the first built-in
drive.
x
-Shift-2
A combination keystroke that ejects any disk
from the second built-in floppy disk drive, on
Macintosh computers that have two built-in drives.
Continue button
A button in the lower portion of the
Apple IIe Option Panel. You click it to return to what
you were doing prior to opening the Option Panel.
Control Panel
See Macintosh control panels.
Control-
x-Esc
A combination keystroke that opens
the Apple IIe Option Panel. Press Control-
x-Esc
whenever you need to use the Option Panel.
D
daisy-chain
To link together sequentially.
Delay Until Key Repeat setting
A setting in the
General Controls panel. You use it to set the length
of the delay before a character begins repeating
when its key is held down. See Key Repeat rate.
desktop
See Macintosh desktop.
Display setting
A setting in the General Controls panel
that you use to choose between a monochrome and
color display. (The Color setting works only if you
have a color monitor.)
E
Eject buttons
Two buttons in the lower portion of the
Apple IIe Option Panel that you use to eject disks
from the built-in floppy disk drive or drives. If your
computer has two built-in drives, both buttons are
active. If your computer has only one built-in drive,
only the rightmost button is active; the inactive
button appears dimmed.
environment
A particular manner or method in which
the computer functions. The Apple IIe Card allows
the Macintosh LC to have an Apple IIe environment—
that is, to act in a manner that conforms to Apple IIe
conventions.
F
Finder
See Macintosh Finder.
floppy disk startup people
People who must start up
from the
IIe Startup Disk to use the Apple IIe Card,
generally because they do not have a hard
disk or because the hard disk contains a version of
system software incompatible with the Apple IIe
Card. Compare hard disk startup people.
Glossary
162