You can set the following preferences in the category of the window.
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This determines which menu set displays in the main Maya menu bar on start-up. The default is Animation.
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Hides or displays the main menu bar (Windows and Linux). Hides or displays the Panels menu bar (all platforms).
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Hides or displays the title bars in the main window and the (Windows and Linux). The title bar includes window control buttons for expanding and collapsing the application.
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Turn on so that Maya restores the size and position of all windows when closed and re-opened. If turned off, the Maya windows always
display in the center of the screen upon opening.
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Turn on Hold focus if you want the cursor to stay in the after you press (Windows and Linux) or (Mac OS X). Otherwise, the cursor returns to the current window.
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Use this option to specify how the displays when you open it (such as pressing +a (Windows and Linux) or +a (Mac OS X)). To open the in a separate window, select In Separate Window. To open the in the main Maya window, select In Main Maya Window. By default, the opens in Maya’s main window.
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Use this option to specify how the Tool Settings display when you open them. To open the Tool Settings in a separate window,
select In Separate Window. To open the in the main Maya window, select In Main Maya Window. By default, the Tool Settings window opens in Maya’s main window.
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Use this option to specify how the display when you open them. (Window > General Editors > Display Layer Editor or Window > Rendering Editors > Render Layer
Editor). To open the in a separate window, select In Separate Window. To open the in the main Maya window, select In Main Maya Window. By default, the Layer editors window opens in Maya’s main window.
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Select an for editing text.
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Lets you set whether or not Maya’s scroll bars can be moved by your mouse’s scroll wheel. When on, you can scroll through
various lists and windows in Maya using your mouse’s scroll wheel (for example, you can use your mouse’s scroll wheel to scroll
through a long list of attributes).
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On Mac OS X, Maya gives you the option of using either a three button mouse, a two button mouse, or a single button mouse.
(All documentation assumes the use of a three button mouse).
The following table shows the functional equivalents of two or one button mouse clicks to three-button mouse clicks.
When you use tumble, track, dolly, or select zoom with a one or two button mouse, the command controls are different from
the controls described in the documentation for the three button mouse. Below is a table that specifies the control changes.
Function |
Three button |
Two button |
One button |
Tumble
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+ |
+ |
+ |
Track
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+ |
+ + |
+ + |
Dolly
|
+ |
+ |
+ + |
Select zoom |
+ + |
+ + |
not available |
NoteFor select zoom, hold the corresponding buttons for select zoom and draw a box around the part of the view where you want
to dolly in and out.
If you drag the box out from left to right, you dolly in.
If you drag the box out from right to left, you dolly out.