Sorry, but I found your reply confusing.
"If you tab the Alt key once, it will highlight the menu." Tab-Alt does
nothing, and Alt-Tab, of course switches windows. If you meant "Tap", which
is the term I used, then tapping the Alt key does nothing.
"...you'll only have to type the underscored letters and no longer
hold/press tab." This gave me some hope that I could execute a series of
functions without losing the menu. That would be great, Unfortunately,
nothing I tried made that happen.
You did bring me closer, though. The only interpretation that did anything
for me was the following:
Right-click the entry (Opens the menu.)
Tap the Tab key once (Locks the menu open for a *single* use.)
Tap the appropriate underscored letter (Executes the function and closes the
menu.)
If you can improve on that, please enlighten me.
"Roady [MVP]" <newsgroups_DELETE_@_DELETE_sparnaaij_NO_._SPAM_net> wrote in
message news:(E-Mail Removed)...
> If you tab the Alt key once, it will highlight the menu. After that,
> you'll only have to type the underscored letters and no longer hold/press
> tab.
>
> --
> Robert Sparnaaij [MVP-Outlook]
> Coauthor, Configuring Microsoft Outlook 2003
> http://www.howto-outlook.com/
> Outlook FAQ, HowTo, Downloads, Add-Ins and more
>
> http://www.msoutlook.info/
> Real World Questions, Real World Answers
>
> -----
>
> "BudV" <(E-Mail Removed)> wrote in message
> news:#kw5$(E-Mail Removed)...
>> OL2003 under WinXP Home SP3.
>>
>> If I'm not mistaken, Bill has told us we can run (most of) Windows
>> without a mouse, by taking advantage of menus' underscored letters and
>> the Alt key.
>>
>> I can't make it work in the navigation pane. When I have a menu showing,
>> it disappears as soon as I tap the Alt key, before I can tap the
>> underscored letter.
>>
>>
>>