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<tip category="Kig">
<html>
<p>One of the most powerful tools in Kig are the menus that you can
enter by right-clicking on an object, or on some empty space in the
document. You can use them to give objects names, change their colors
and line styles, and lots of other interesting things.</p>
</html>
</tip>
<tip category="Kig">
<html>
<p>You can construct new points without using the menu or the toolbar, simply
clicking somewhere on the Kig document with the <em>middle mouse
button</em>.</p>
</html>
</tip>
<tip category="Kig">
<html>
<p>Kig can open several file formats: its files (<code>.kig</code> files),
<em>KGeo</em> files, <em>KSeg</em> files, and, partially, <em>Dr. Geo</em>
and <em>Cabri™</em> files.</p>
</html>
</tip>
<tip category="Kig">
<html>
<p>Kig has more than 40 objects and 10 transformations you can construct and use
in your documents: open the <em>Objects</em> menu to see them all.</p>
</html>
</tip>
<tip category="Kig">
<html>
<p>You can use the selected objects to start the construction of an object
which requires the selected objects as arguments. For example, if you have two
points selected, you can choose <em>Start->Circle by Three Points</em> from the
popup menu to start constructing a circle by three points.</p>
</html>
</tip>
<tip category="Kig">
<html>
<p>Kig can extends its object set using external macros. You can find some
interesting macro on Kig website:
<a href="http://edu.kde.org/kig">http://edu.kde.org/kig</a>.</p>
</html>
</tip>
<tip category="Kig">
<html>
<p>If you have more than one object under the mouse, and you want to select any
of them, you can click with the <em>left mouse button</em>, while holding the
<em>Shift</em> key, to get a list of the objects under the mouse cursor which
you can then select from.</p>
</html>
</tip>
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