Click on the Restore settings to their original defaults.Click on the advance option and scroll down to the end.Once you opened the chrome setting, Next scroll down to the advance option.Launch Google Chrome Browser and Click on the three dots from the top right corner and choose setting.Method 3: Restore Chrome settings to default This will disable the hardware acceleration Mode in chrome. Under the system, Turn off the Toggle switch of Use hardware acceleration when available.To Disable Hardware acceleration mode, Launch the Chrome Browser and open settings.Click on the overlay scrollbar setting and choose the Disabled Option from the Dropdown Menu.Open Google Chrome and type the following URL in the address bar.Follow the steps below to disable the Overlay scrollbar. If by Mistake this setting was enabled you can face this type error. By default, this setting is set to disabled. This setting is used to hide the scroll bar when not in use. Sometimes the scroll bar might be in hidden state, check the scroll bar overlay setting in chrome flags.
If not Go to Chrome settings > About Chrome, then update the chrome. Method 3: Restore Chrome settings to defaultīefore proceeding with the below-mentioned methods first check the chrome is updated or not.
This seems to enable the arrow keys to go up and down to the other options. While using the form, you can use the arrow keys to select an option in the drop down menu AFTER youve first clicked (with the mouse) on one of the available options. The second picture shows half the tool bar so you can see it. The aforementioned behaviour happens as soon as you enable 'AllowEmptySelection'. This is not a bad problem but it is very annoying. In the first picture I did the entire bottom of the screen.
Method 2: Disabled hardware Acceleration I looked up how to take a screen shot and I am uploading the shots I took to the site.It's not a show-stopper, but it would be nice if arrow-key behavior could be modified. Accordance does have a lot of options for customizing keyboard shortcuts, but no way as far as I can tell to change the behavior of the arrow keys. In all fairness to OakTree, I should note that Windows apps do seem to have more discretion in how the arrow keys are used than they take with other control/navigation keys, but there are also sometimes ways of changing what the keys do to better fit a person's preferences. All my navigation is done via the touchpad or keyboard and via the keyboard I get the same results as you. I use a laptop (on my lap 99.9% of the time) so rarely have occasion to use an external mouse, so I can't compare navigation results on that. CTRL ALT SHIFT moves up/down 10 chapters at a time.CTRL ALT up/down moves up/down a chapter at a time.CTRL SHIFT up/down moves up/down 10 verses at a time.SHIFT up/down highlights line at a time.Using CTRL up/down moves text in pane up/down one verse.Using up/down arrow keys moves cursor up/down a single line (text in window does not move until you hit top / bottom of tab) Using ALT + up/down is same behavior.Using SHIFT freezes text (ie, does nothing).
Using CTRL and/or ALT does not change behavior.Scrolling text in the active tab moves text in pane up/down one line at a time.
As far as I can tell, with accordance, my choices are: 1) Use the pgup/pgdn keys to scroll a full page at a time, or 2) use a mouse/trackpad to scroll less than a page at a time, or 3) change the preference as you noted, but then the arrow keys result in a jump to the previous or next article, which may be less than a page, or potentially, several pages. each press of the arrow key moves the content up or down one line, and holding the arrow key down will result in a continuous one-line-at-a-time scroll until you release the arrow key. This often comes in handy when wanting to keep most of the current content on the screen, but be able to scroll the content up or down by just a line (or two or three) in order to view a few lines of the previous or following text in visual context with what you've just been reading on the screen. What I was getting at is, that in other Windows apps, when viewing textual content (or a mix of text and graphics), using the up and down arrow keys will scroll all the content on the screen, up or down by just one line. I realize I didn't explain myself well in my original post. Try changing Preferences -> General -> Arrow Keys -> Change Resources and Navigate.Īlso note that, even without setting the preference, you can use Ctrl+Arrow Keys (and other modifiers) to navigate the text.Īs with my Atlas question, thanks again Joel for your help.