If your Apple keyboard has icons printed on some of the keys on its top row, these keys can be used to perform the special features shown in each icon. They can also be used as standard function keys (F1–F12). The action performed by standard function keys varies depending on the app you're using, or depending on the keyboard shortcuts listed in the Keyboard & Mouse pane of System Preferences:.
![How to use the f3 button in minecraft for mac download How to use the f3 button in minecraft for mac download](/uploads/1/2/5/4/125402603/949374649.png)
It's F5 on the Mac as well, but a lot of Macs have different functions attached to the keys. (For example my mac book pro uses F5 to dim the lights under the keys). If you go to System Preferences, keyboard and Mouse then there's a check box you tick to take off the tagged function.
By default, pressing one of these keys performs the special feature indicated by the icon printed on the key. For example, pressing the keys with speaker icons adjusts the volume. If you want to use one of these keys as a standard function key, hold the Fn key (usually in the lower-left corner of the keyboard) while pressing the function key. For example, pressing Fn-F10 (speaker icon) performs the function assigned to the F10 key instead of toggling mute on or off. If you prefer the top row of keys to always behave as standard function keys without holding the Fn key:. Choose System Preferences from the Apple menu.
Click Keyboard. Click the Keyboard tab if it's not already highlighted.
Select 'Use all F1, F2, etc. Keys as standard function keys' With this option enabled, the keys on the top row act as standard function keys (F1–F12).
To use a feature indicated by the icon printed on a key, hold Fn while pressing the key.
Right Mouse Button: Place Selected Object / Open Door/Chest/Object Movement Controls (Keyboard) W - Move Forward S - Move Backward A - Move Left D - Move Right E: Open the Inventory Window Number Keys 1 thru 9: Select Corresponding Hot Bar Box Left Shift: Engage Sneak / Walk to Edge of Terrain without falling ESC (Escape) Key: Access the Pause Menu F3 - Display performance data and your current co-ordinates Windows PC Pause Menu Screen - Back to Game: Return to the Game Window. Achievements (Not for LIVE). Statistics: General / Blocks / Items. Options: Video Settings / Control Configuration / Language / Difficulty / Invert Mouse. Save and Quite to Title: Save the game and quit to the Loading Screen. Note: Of the above the Statistics and the Achievement screens are the ones you are most likely to return to often, and find interesting. Achievements in the game are actually structured as an unofficial and very loose Quest/Mission system in the game (which is by design according to Notch, and are intended to be strictly voluntary) which is why the nested trees are locked (the descriptions are hidden for Achievements that have prerequisites). The Numbers quickly Add Up in Minecraft Xbox 360 LIVE Arcade Controls The primary controls for the game make very effective use of the Gamepad, and the generically similar controls found in the game should be familiar to any gamer who plays shooters.
Orientation (PoV): Left Joystick movement: Right Joystick Left Trigger: Attack with Active Weapon / Use the selected Hot Bar Item. Right Trigger: Place Selected Object / Open Door/Chest/Object (More Control Details Coming Soon) The world in Minecraft comes in four basic difficulty levels: Peaceful, Easy, Normal, and Hard.
The primary difference between the four modes is that Peaceful Difficulty consists of a world that has no - and therefore very few dangers that are outside of the player's control - while the other three difficulty modes do have mobs. Most players will be playing the game on the default difficulty (Normal) - though you may find that Peaceful Difficulty is useful when you just want to focus your attention upon building structures and devices without the hassle of being disturbed by and the risks associated with nighttime play. Views like this make the difficulty worth it. When you respawn - assuming for the moment that you set your spawn-point in your home - you will appear nearby and can then simply run to your body to recover your items, which are now scattered on the ground near where you were killed. Note that if the mob is still in the area and was not killed in their attack on you, you may well still have to deal with them to get to your stuff. Also note that failing to reach your death point within a few minutes can result in some (or all if you really take too long) of your items disappearing from the game. There is a hard 5-minute timer that guarantees that if you fail to get to your death point within 5 minutes you will lose all of the items you were carrying. Death by mob or mischance / accident does NOT effect items that are stored in chests in your Den - so you should make it a practice to regularly transfer any really valuable loot and resources to your storage chests frequently, and try not to carry more resources on you than you actually need for the activity you are doing. One of the misunderstood aspects of the game are the character levels, which are denoted in the game by the Green Bar that runs along the entire length of the status interface in the bottom center of the screen, consisting of 18 Green Dashes with the current Level in numerical form above it. When you fill all 18 dashes with XP, you advance to the next level. XP Levels in Minecraft are very different than XP and Levels in most other games in that they are not so much a measure of your capabilities and prowess as they are a system for banking magical potential. If that confuses you think of it this way: The XP that you acquire from slaying is really a measure of the 'life force' that you drain away from them, in the form of glowing colored balls of energy that you must walk over to collect after the battle and after you have killed the mob.
In addition to the items that the mob drops - which depending on the mob type can be very valuable - the aforementioned colored balls are also 'dropped' and, like loot, when you walk over or near them, your character collects them, adding their value to the progress meter and eventually leading to the acquisition of a new level. Later when you have crafted a nice weapon - like a Diamond Sword - you may want to Enchant the weapon to give it extra power or a beneficial side-effect. To do this you use the Enchantment Table (the Enchanting Crafts Interface) in your Den. When you access the Enchantment Table you will find that there are three Enchantments listed. One of which you can apply at your choosing. Unfortunately these Enchantments are in a language you do not understand or read - though it would be an idea to copy down the title for the one that you use so that you can start creating your own translation or at least learn the important words in Notchese, I am just saying. Mar 2nd 2015 Q. Son put xbox one minecraft in a different language.
How do we get it back to English? Open the game, then push down on the d-pad 2 times to get to Help & Options.
Now hit 'A' to open that, then 3 down on the d-pad, and 'A' again to open the Settings Menu. Now hit 'A' for the top box/button which is Options, then hit down 5 times on the d-pad to select the first box/button which is Languages. Now hit the d-pad down 1 time to select English and hit the 'A' and viola! You should be all set.