Zoli
Member
- Joined
- Feb 24, 2015
- Member Type
- Student or Learner
- Native Language
- Hungarian
- Home Country
- Hungary
- Current Location
- Romania
Hello,
The sentence is authored by me in terms of its source. It begins with a simple verb, thus constituting a command.
When I say "mapping a key to another key on the keyboard," I mean making the Caps Lock key behave like the CTRL key.
Which of these two sounds more natural? The second option is more explicit, although I'm not sure if necessary because those in the tech field understand what "Ctrl" is without specifying "key".
1. Map the Caps Lock key to Ctrl.
2. Map the Caps Lock key to the Ctrl key.
Also, I think I need to use the term "Remap" because "Caps Lock" already serves its own function before I intend to repurpose it to function as "Ctrl". Is that correct?
1. Remap the Caps Lock key to Ctrl.
The sentence is authored by me in terms of its source. It begins with a simple verb, thus constituting a command.
When I say "mapping a key to another key on the keyboard," I mean making the Caps Lock key behave like the CTRL key.
Which of these two sounds more natural? The second option is more explicit, although I'm not sure if necessary because those in the tech field understand what "Ctrl" is without specifying "key".
1. Map the Caps Lock key to Ctrl.
2. Map the Caps Lock key to the Ctrl key.
Also, I think I need to use the term "Remap" because "Caps Lock" already serves its own function before I intend to repurpose it to function as "Ctrl". Is that correct?
1. Remap the Caps Lock key to Ctrl.