I checked and, indeed, I had hit the wrong key combination. Doing it correctly,
I got the minus sign and successfully removed some items from the MRU list.
In your original mention of this, you cautioned a correspondent to be very
careful, implying that it could be dangerous. Of what use is this minus sign
when working in a document? And what, exacty, are the dangers?
Subject: Re: Ctrl+Alt+Hyphen
From: "Suzanne S. Barnhill"
(e-mail address removed)
I think you must have pressed Alt+Ctrl+Equals Sign instead of Alt+Ctrl+Hyphen.
This will, I believe, give you the plus sign. I have the shortcut assigned to
something else, so I can't test, but the shortcut key listing says this is
assigned to Customize Add Menu Shortcut. According to the Description in
Customize: "When you run this command, the pointer changes to a plus sign (+),
and Word adds the next command you click to a menu. Word adds built-in commands
to the command's default menu and adds macros to the bottom of the Tools menu.
Doesn't add commands to shortcut menus."
Suzanne S. Barnhill
Microsoft MVP (Word)
Words into Type
Fairhope, Alabama USA
Word MVP FAQ site:
http://www.mvps.org/word<
"Daleje" <
[email protected]> wrote
In a recent thread I saw this combination suggested. I thought it was supposed
to result in the cursor becoming a minus sign. I tried it (in Word 97) and it
became a plus sign. I clicked on an item in Word's MRU list but the only thing
that happened was that the document opened.
I'm really curious as to what this minus (or plus) sign is intended for.<