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Ctrl+Num + and Ctrl+Num - keys are used to zoom in and zoom out the text in notpad++. In lenovo laptops one can mimic the functionality by using inbuilt red mouse scroll up and scroll down with ctrl key combination. When you reach the login screen, press the Num Lock key once to enable it. DO NOT LOGIN into the computer. From the login screen, click the power button and select “Shut down” to shut down the computer again. Boot the computer back up and Num Lock will be enabled on the login screen and permanently on, until you turn it off yourself. But, if I press and hold "Shift", or press and release "Num Lock", my numeric pad keys become Home, End, PgUp, PgDn, and cursor (direction) keys — even though I have eight other keys dedicated to those functions. – To enable Num Lock before a user logs on, follow these steps: Run Registry Editor. Move to HKEY_USERS\.Default\Control Panel\Keyboard; Change the value for InitialKeyboardIndicators from 0 to 2. There are other methods built into Windows you can explore to keep that darn light always on! If you want to type arbitrary Unicode characters not in the above list then you must use the hex numpad by creating a registry key named EnableHexNumpad with type REG_SZ in HKCU\Control Panel\Input Method, set its value to 1 then reboot.
Turning on "num lock" using the embedded numlk key (i.e. pressing fn+f12) permanently turns on the embedded numeric keys (as mentioned in the user manual), but this is not what I want either. Question: How can I make the embedded numeric keypad output numbers again when using the fn modifier key? Here it is another groovy (if I say so myself ;-) solution, hold the Num Lk key down for 5 sec and windows will give you the choice to receive a differentiated on/off tone when you touch the three lock keys (caps lock, Num Lock, scroll lock). This feature is called Toggle Keys. Both Windows XP and Windows Vista have the same virtual keyboard. The Num Lock is represented by the nlk button. Windows 7 has a different style. I believe that Num Lock is hidden in the Options button. Windows 8 has, besides the On-Screen Keyboard, a new plethora of touch-based interfaces. I am using Windows 8 (or 8.1) and I need the NumLock key so I can enter Alt codes. But the problem is that there isn't even a NumLock key, even though I looked at the keyboard. This is a Samsung l...