| Notes, Notices, and Cautions | |
| Typographical Conventions |
The following subsections describe notational conventions used in this document.
Throughout this guide, blocks of text may be accompanied by an icon and printed in bold type or in italic type. These blocks are notes, notices, and cautions, and they are used as follows:
| NOTE: A NOTE indicates important information that helps you make better use of your computer system. |
NOTICE: A NOTICE indicates either potential damage to hardware or loss of data and tells you how to avoid the problem.
| CAUTION: A CAUTION indicates a potentially hazardous situation which, if not avoided, may result in minor or moderate injury. |
The following list defines (where appropriate) and illustrates typographical conventions used as visual cues for specific elements of text throughout this document:
Example: Click OK.
Example: <Enter>
Example: <Ctrl><Alt><Enter>
Example: Use the format command to . . . .
In contrast, commands presented in the Courier New font are part of an instruction and intended to be typed.
Example: Type format a: to format the diskette in drive A.
Examples: autoexec.bat and c:\windows
Example: The following message appears on your screen:
No boot device available
Example: Type md c:\programs and press <Enter>.
Example: DIMM_x (where x represents the DIMM socket designation)