
Some of the humor is at the expense of other people, however. Hailee Steinfeld does a terrific job as Charlie. Some of the dialogue is clunky, some of it is hilarious. A lot of imagination has gone into the movie. Battles follow, with Charlie in the thick of the action.īUMBLEBEE contains a lot of fun action adventure, but it’s almost paint-by-numbers. Charlie befriends Bumblebee, but two Decepticons and a human scientist convince the Army Bumblebee is the villain. Optimus Prime orders Bumblebee to hide out on Earth from the Decepticons. The mouse and keyboard function as a team when the mouse is used to select a target and F4 is used to Repeat formatting or text.BUMBLEBEE is an action-packed origin story about the friendliest Transformer, combined with a teenage angst story about a girl named Charlie who’s lost her father and become alienated. To Repeat formatting, apply the format directly to the first target, and then use F4 to re-apply it to others.įormatting using Repeat is even more powerful when you use it to re-apply styles.Ĭheck: F4 is especially useful when you need to repeat a command requiring many steps, or one which must access a dialog box buried deep within Repeating text can be even better than using Copy and Paste because there's no need to copy first (Ctrl-C), and it's easier to press F4 than Repeat the text as many times in as many places as you like until you take a new action and that becomes the repeat action. Then, move the insertion point to a different location and press F4 to To repeat typing, enter text from the keyboard without hitting Enter. It is most often used it to repeat typing or formatting. Repeat does exactly what its name says - it repeats the most recent action taken, not including selecting text, scrolling, or Word's Repeat (F4) feature is highly versatile, easy to use, and can save you a lot of work.

We can switch back and forth between "before" (Undo) and "after" (Redo) as many times as it takes to decide between two formats. The combination of Undo and Redo makes experimenting easy. Change your mind again about that formatting change that you just undid? Just

Redo (Ctrl-Y) re-does anything that Undo un-does. Saving changes regularly you won't lose much). (The solution in that case would be to close the worksheet without saving and then re-open it. Very few exceptions exist - one example would be deleting an Excel worksheet - that's

Will Undo un-do everything? Not quite, but almost. Undo also lets us gracefully change our mind about that formatting change we just made. Don't like what just happened? Press Ctrl-Z and it'sĪs if it never happened.

It protects against word processing disasters, big and small.
