I had originally included only QT commands because Paul Henrichsen, who's a QT 
user, was requesting them.  Not after I'd sent this message did I see Evelyn 
stating that it might be helpful to her, and as I know she has a BT, I thought 
BT equivalents might be helpful to her.  The Find command is SPACE with F.  To 
define a place marker, it's BACKSPACE with D, and to jump to one, it's SPACE 
with J.  You'd type the appropriate letter at the place marker prompts.  
Everything else but the commands is the same.

>----- Original Message -----
>From: "Maria Kristic" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>To: Braillenote List <[email protected]
>Sent: Sat, 18 Dec 2004 15:30:50 -0800
>Subject: Re: [Braillenote] The Cursor

>If you've written something like "verse 2", "verse 3", etc.  before the verses 
>or "chorus" before the chorus, (without the quotes) you could do a find (READ 
>with F) and search backwards or forwards for that word.  Or, (and I think this 
>might be faster), you have 26 place markers you can set in a KeyWord type 
>document (so you would have to create a KeyWord type copy of the document, of 
>which there are several ways of doing this), and you could set them to the 
>places to which you want to get to quickly.  If you name a place marker with a 
>letter which already corresponds to another marker, you'll be asked if not 
>wish to move the marker with that letter from the previous place to your 
>current place.  To define a place marker, you position your cursor at the 
>place where you want it, and you then hit READ with D, and define the letter; 
>to jump to a marker, you press READ with P, and type the associated letter 
>(you don't have to choose to go forward or backward because the whole document 
>will be searched for that marker).  Read all subtopics of "Place Marker 
>Topics" in the index of your User Guide for the info on the markers.  Just a 
>thought.

>HTH,
>Maria


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