Conventions Used in This Book
The following typographical conventions are used in this book:
Constant widthIndicates command-line computer output, code examples, commands, text to type, and paths to Registry keys.
Constant width italicIndicates user-defined elements within constant-width text (such as filenames or command-line parameters). For example, Chapter 8 discusses a file encryption utility, cipher.exe, which has a variety of command-line options. A particular solution might instruct you to type:
cipher /r:
filenameThe italic portion of the above code,
filename, signifies the element you'll need to replace with whatever is applicable to your system or needs. The rest — the non-italicized portion — should be typed exactly as shown.- Bold
Identifies captions, menus, buttons, checkboxes, tabs, keyboard keys, and other interface elements. By bolding interface elements, it makes it easy to distinguish them from the rest of the text. For example, you may wish to turn off the Force Windows to crash option.
Window/dialog titles and icon captions are typically not bolded, but some objects (such as Control Panel contents) can appear as icons or menu items, and therefore typically appear bolded.
- Italic
Introduces new terms and indicates web site URLs, file and folder names, and variables.
- "Quotation marks"
Are used sparingly in this book, and are typically used to indicate references to topic headings and emphasize new concepts. Note that if you see quotation marks around something you're supposed ...
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