Showing posts with label Google Basics. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Google Basics. Show all posts

Thursday, June 25, 2020

Hebrew Vowels (Niqud) for Google Docs on Chromebooks

I have figured out how to insert vowels into Google Docs on a Chromebook. If this is documented fully anywhere, I haven't found it. Wikipedia is blank on this.

This is for Chromebooks and some newer PCs. It does not work on older PCs. (For Niqud in Windows, see this post.)

If you need a refresher on setting up Hebrew in Google Docs / on a Chromebook, see my post here.

The key (pun fully intended) to doing this is the Alt Graph key, often abbreviated AltGr. Don't panic. You do so have one. It's the Alt Key to the right of the spacebar.


When you are in Hebrew on a Chromebook (Ctrl + Spacebar to switch back and forth), position the cursor after the letter under/over which you wish to insert a vowel. Hold the AltGr (again, the Alt Key to the right of the spacebar) plus the following keys to insert niqqud.

(There's kind of a mnemonic to it - for many of the basic vowels, the key is the Hebrew letter that begins the name of the vowel. So [AltGR +] the ח'‏ key (J) for חירק; the צ'‏ (M) for צירה, the ד'‏ for דגש; the ש'‏ for שוא. The תנועות חטופות are immediately to the right of their counterparts. So פ'‏ (P) for פתח and the [ key for חטף פתח; the ק'‏ (E) for קמץ and the ר'‏ (R) for חטף קמץ; and the ס'‏ (X) for סגול and the ב'‏ (C) for חטף סגול.  The ו'‏‏ (U) is also the dot for the חולם. The backslash \ looks like a קבוץ, I guess.
Since the A is the ש'‏ key, the key to its upper right (W) puts the dot for the shin, and the  key to its upper left (Q) puts the dot for the sin.)



Key Combo
Vowel / Symbol
AltGr + E (ק)
קמץ
AltGr + R (רׂׂ)
חטף קמץ
AltGr + P (פ)
פתח
AltGr + [
חטף פתח
AltGr + X (ס)
סגול
AltGr + C (ב)
חטף סגול
AltGr + U (ו)
חולם dot
AltGr + J (ח)
חירק
AltGr + M (צ)
צירה
AltGr + S (ד)
דגש (also the dot for שורק)
AltGr + A (ש)
שוא
AltGr + \
קבוץ
AltGr + W
dot for שִׁין
AltGr + Q
dot for שִׂין
AltGr + 7
מתג
AltGr + -
מקף
AltGr + ‘/” 
גרשים a/k/a tzupchik -  רש״י
AltGr + `/~
ר׳ - גרש
AltGr + ;
Bottom of the line quote mark - „
AltGr + 
Quote mark proper direction - ”
AltGr + 4
New Israeli Shekel NIS
AltGr + ]
רפה mark - רֿ
Niqqud for Chromebooks  © Jeff Kuperman 2020


Downloadable copy can  be accessed here.

Thursday, March 7, 2019

Search within folders in Google Drive

Sometimes something new is right in front of you and you don't pick up on the difference. Once when I was a kid, my father shaved off his mustache and I didn't notice it.

Apparently, for the last year, there's been a new feature in Google Drive; one, in fact, that I always felt was a major missing feature that rendered Google Drive less than user-friendly. You can now (now being either January 2018, or this morning, when I finally noticed it) search within folders on Google Drive.

This is important. Although I keep my Drive fairly neat, with nested folders within folders, often I can't remember in which folder a crucial file is hiding.

Right click on the folder in Google Drive online. One of your options is "search within _____ "


Wednesday, September 5, 2018

Sir Links-a-Lot Chrome extension

Here's a handy extension that can change your Google Doc's sharing setting from "Anyone with a link can edit / view" to forcing anyone with the link to make a copy.

Why would you want to do that?

I use it all the time to send out a Google Doc when I want every student to have his/her own copy to edit, highlight, take notes on, etc. but not as a class.

It can be found in the Chrome store here.

When installed, it looks like this when you click it while you have a Google Doc open.


Click Force copy and it with change the "edit" in the link to "copy.

Then share this new link with your class.

There are other functions available; I have found this one to be the most useful.

You can also do this manually, without the extension. Directions here.

Monday, November 6, 2017

Supercharge your Google Apps with Add-ons and Chrome with Extensions


ICYMI - From today's Mimi Charnoff Professional Development Day, my list of my go-to Add-ons for Google Apps (Docs, Forms, Slides) and my favorites extensions for Chrome.

REMINDER: Extensions only work in Chrome on a Chromebook, a PC or a Mac. They do NOT work on Chrome on a phone or tablet (iPad, etc.) as they are not true Chrome browsers.


Google Doc Add-ons
Change Case
For those typing mistakes - ALL CAPS all gone
Extensis Fonts
Find precisely the right font
Kaizena
Add voice comments to a shared doc thru Google Classroom
Highlight Tool
Share labeled highlighter categories
Sefaria
Add Jewish texts directly to docs
In an open Google Doc, go to Add-ons.

Google Form Add-ons
123RF Stock Photos
Free photos to insert into Forms
All Questions Required?
For Quizzes - Click when finished
CheckItOut
For keeping track of inventory
Form Publisher
Convert to Doc, Slide, Sheet
Form Limiter
Limit time or number of responses
PaperScorer
Create bubble sheet from form - scan w/ phone to score


Google Slides Add-Ons - NEW!
AdobeStock


Free photos to insert into Slides
ShutterStock
Unsplash Photos
Pear Deck
Create formative assessments and interactive slides
Slides Toolbox
One-click for repeated tasks


Supercharge Chrome with Extensions
Edit Microsoft Office files with converting to Docs, etc.
Save articles to read later
Blocks ads online
Does what it says
Post or push site to Google Classroom
Click and e-mail webpage
Save directly to Keep
Declutters distracting pages
Declutter and open multi-page articles
Create a temp, real-word URL shortcut
New tabs open blank
Double-click on a word for its definition
Turn all your tabs into 1 link page
Translate, transliterate into other languages
On-screen tutorials within Google Apps
If you need to insert foreign accents
Opens Rediker in parallel window from Classroom
Opens up to 20 docs in separate tabs

Sunday, September 3, 2017

Saving in Google Drive - Folders

By default, when you create a Google Doc, it just saves it to your Google Drive. Multiply that by all your files (and everything shared with you), and you're not going to be able to find anything pretty soon.

I'll detail two ways to create folders and move files into them - the on-the-fly method for those of us who forget to set up the folder before we make the file, and the from-scratch method for those people who plan ahead. (I do not include myself in that group, but I know they exist.)

Method One - From Google Docs


Once you've created the Google Doc, it will be automatically saved in Google Drive.

To create a new folder and move the file there, click on the Folder icon (Move to...) next to the file name in the upper left corner. It will bring up your Google Drive. Click on the Folder icon with the Plus sign.



Name the Folder (1) and click on the Check sign.



This creates the new folder. Finally, click on Move here and your file will be relocated into the newly-created folder.


Of course, you can maneuver to a previous folder and create a sub-folder (a folder within a folder) ad infinitum.

Method Two - From Google Drive


1. For those Plan Ahead people, go to Google Drive and click NEW (1) and then  click on the Folder icon with the Plus sign (2).


2. Name (1) and then create (2) the new folder.


3. After you create your new Google Doc,  to move it to the destined folder, click on the Folder icon (Move to...) next to the file name in the upper left corner. It will bring up your Google Drive. 




 4. Scroll down to your newly-created folder, click on it and then hit Move.

5. And you will see a briefly displayed message confirming that your file has been moved.


Of course, once you have already created a folder, you can just use steps 4 & 5 over and over to move files to their proper place.