What Chuck said...
Example - Google Search:
https://support.google.com/websearch/answer/106230
[...}
Can I turn off Autocomplete?
No, Autocomplete is built into Google Search to help you search faster and
easier.
[...]
"CRPence" wrote in message
news:mailman.3214.1393026593.25182.pctech@xxxxxxxxxxxx...
On 21-Feb-2014 11:56 -0800, Booth Martin wrote:
There has to be a simple way to do this but I have never found it.
When I am typing a word, the software will provide suggestions as to
what I might be trying to type. OK. Great. So how do I tell it
"Yeah, baby, that is it. Next word please" and accept the word, add a
space, and be ready to type the next word?
Quite dependent on the software presenting the options, and the UI
[which may be hardware dependent; e.g. touch screen vs keyboard input].
I infer in the scenario alluded, pressing either the space or a
punctuation character effects what is commonly referred to as the
auto-completion even if possibly better described as auto-selection.
In other applications however, those may require using the tab to
highlight a selection and then pressing Enter, or require clicking on
the selection from those presented, or simply pressing Enter because the
input-line has the predicted value projected there.
For example in the IBM InfoCenter Search, the tab is useless; it
simply terminates what is currently typed and navigates to the _GO_
button. In Firefox the navigation input [where a URI is typed], there
is the option to either select the currently visible value projected in
the input-line simply by pressing Enter, or tabbing through the other
selections presented in the pull-down [that popped up when typing was
started].
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