What can Sticky Keys do?
The Sticky Keys feature is for people who can only type one key at a time. When Sticky Keys is turned on, you can electronically hold down the SHIFT, CTRL, and/or ALT keys while you type other keys. The SHIFT, CONTROL, and ALT keys are considered modifier keys since they do not produce any characters themselves, but modify the characters and functions generated by other keys on the keyboard. When Sticky Keys is activated, pressing a modifier key (SHIFT, CTRL, or ALT) twice will lock down that key. You can then unlock the key by pressing it a third time. For example, if you press SHIFT and then type the word “hello”, the output will be “Hello”. Note that just the “h” is capitalized. However, if you press SHIFT twice before typing the word “hello”, the output will be “HELLO”. Note that this time, the entire word is in capital letters. In fact, any letter you type before hitting the SHIFT key again will be capitalized. There is no keyboard shortcut for turning on Sticky Keys. However, you