Chapter 6. Programs & Documents

When you get right down to it, an operating system is nothing more than a home base from which to launch apps (that is, applications) (that is, programs). And you, as a Windows person, are particularly fortunate, since more apps are available for Windows than for any other operating system on earth.

But when you open a program, you’re no longer necessarily in the world Microsoft designed for you. Programs from other companies work differently, and there’s a lot to learn about how Windows 10 handles programs that were born before it was.

This chapter covers everything you need to know about installing, removing, launching, and managing programs; using programs to generate documents; and understanding how documents, programs, and Windows communicate with one another.

Note

In the beginning, programs were things that ran on computers; apps ran on phones and tablets. Microsoft would very much like the Great Merging of these categories to hurry up. So in Windows 10, it refers to all programs as “apps.” (Except in older dialog boxes, like the old Control Panel, where they’re still called “programs.” Sigh.) In this book, “apps” and “programs” are the same thing, and the terms appear interchangeably to spice things up.

Opening Programs

Windows lets you launch (open) programs in many different ways:

  • Choose a program’s name from the Start menu.

  • Click a program’s icon on the taskbar.

  • Double-click an application’s program-file icon in the This PC Local ...

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