![]() I hope this helps Mac users when they need to type “Control-Alt-Delete. Of course, if you are a finger gymnast, you can always enter “Control-Alt-Delete” with the same three-finger salute as PC users. Use Picture-in-Picture view? Access to the keyboard menu is just the same as in Coherence. It also shows you any apps that have hung and allows you to force quit them. ![]() Pressing those three keys together pulls up a window displaying currently-running apps. You don’t use Window or Coherence view? If you use Full Screen view, then do the same thing as in Coherence after first moving your mouse cursor to the top edge of the screen in order to make the Mac menu bar appear, as shown in Figure 4. The alternatives to Control-Alt-Delete on a Mac The closest equivalent to the well-known Windows keyboard shortcut on a Mac is Command-Option (Alt)-Escape. You don’t use Window View? If you use Coherence View, then just use the || menu in the Mac menu bar, as shown in Figure 3. (See Figure 2.) No finger gymnastics needed. Since it’s so commonly used in Windows, “Control-Alt-Delete” is at the top of the menu. ![]() Then whenever you need “Control-Alt-Delete” in a Windows VM, click on the little keyboard status icon to see the many menu item equivalents of key combos. Ctrl + Alt + Delete in Windows is equivalent to Command + fn + delete in Mac OS X Share Improve this answer answered at 17:32 piyush nautiyal 1 Add a comment Highly active question. If you use a virtual machine in the Window view, just click on the reveal triangle in the window’s title bar to show the very useful status icons. Click on the Apple menu and select Force Quit. There is no direct analog to “Control-Alt-Delete” on the Mac. Before we begin we will quickly summarise the five different ways to force quit on a Mac: Right click on the app in the Dock. “Control-Alt-Delete” is also used to kill off an application that has hung or is otherwise running amok. (At least Microsoft hopes so and put in a great deal engineering work to make this true.) “Control-Alt-Delete” is used to get the log-on screen so that you can be sure you’re not being spoofed and your password is not being stolen. “Control-Alt-Delete” is the ultimate non-hackable Windows control. Sidebar: Why is “Control-Alt-Delete” so important in Windows? So I’m rather fortunate that an extremely common key combo used in Windows, “Control-Alt-Delete,” has a menu alternative in Parallels Desktop® for Mac. I would much rather use a button on the Ribbon or choose a menu item than use a key combo. While they are speedy, they’re cumbersome, often require two hands, and for me, are hard to remember. Unlike fonts-which I can’t get enough of-key combos are something that I just don’t use much at all. Since I have already admitted one character flaw on this blog ( font addiction), I might as well fess up about another: key combos. See also: How to press Alt Key on Mac and other Windows shortcuts Having problems typing “Control-Alt-Delete” (also sometimes abbreviated as “Ctrl+Alt+Del”) in your Windows virtual machine on your Mac®? This article has everything you need to know about entering this important Windows shortcut.
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