Control-Y

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Control-Y is a common computer command. It is generated by pressing the Y Key at the same time as the Control key on most Computer Keyboards.

In graphical user interface environments that use the control key to control the active program, control-Y is often used to redo actions.

In Specific Applications

Command+Y usually does not have this meaning in the Apple Macintosh operating system, where Shift+ Command+Z often does it.[1]

For Linux programs, it usually does nothing or functions as redo. In many applications, redo is handled by Shift+Control+Z.[citation needed]

In emacs, Control+Y does a paste action (known as "yank").[2] In vi and vim Control+Y scrolls the page up, line by line[citation needed]. In pico and nano text editors shortcut scrolls one page up[3][4].

In SAPgui this enters block select mode, allowing the user to select text from a fixed-width text output such as an ABAP report. The mouse cursor turns into a cross-hair and the user can drag it across some text in order to select it (text in reports is not selectable across vertical text lines in SAPGui).[citation needed]

In Microsoft Office this keyboard shortcut functions as redo, it repeats previous action[5].

References

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See also

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  1. Apple Shortcut Key Standards
  2. Yanking - GNU Emacs Manual
  3. http://www.itcs.umich.edu/itcsdocs/r1168/
  4. http://staffwww.fullcoll.edu/sedwards/Nano/NanoKeyboardCommands.html
  5. https://support.office.com/en-US/article/keyboard-shortcuts-for-microsoft-word-9a2e0234-e682-49ff-a4aa-999f07b51bf3