How To Open Your Windows XP Command Prompt Window

By Dave Taylor
Expert Author
Article Date: 2009-11-05

I read some set of instructions for Windows saying that I need to go to the "Control Panel" and change some settings. On a computer running Microsoft Windows XP, Windows Vista or Windows 7, how do I open the Control Panel?

Dave's Answer:


Sometimes a list of Windows instructions will tell you to "go to the Control Panel" and do something, but beginning Windows users may not know how to get there. Not a problem, nothing to be embarrassed about!

The geeky but fast keyboard way to open the Control Panel is to first open up a Run dialog by holding down the Windows key on your keyboard and pressing R. (The "Windows" key on a keyboard is in the lower-left area with the squiggly Windows logo on it -- usually between the Ctrl and the Alt key on your keyboard)

The Run dialog looks like this:



run dialog

Inside the Run dialog box, type "control" and hit Enter. The Control Panel will open, looking something like this:



control panel category view

Now, most of the time, you can also open the Control Panel via the simpler method of clicking the Start Menu and clicking the Control Panel icon:



start menu control panel

However, the Control Panel icon is not guaranteed to be present under the Start Menu on every computer. Opening a Run dialog and typing "control" will always work.

The Control Panel window displayed above is shown in "Category View". If you click the link in the left-hand side of the window, you can switch to "Classic View":



control panel classic view

Which view you need, may depend on which set of instructions you're trying to follow. If you're following a set of instructions that says to "Go into the Control Panel and click the Display icon", as you can see from the images above, the "Display" icon is not present in Category View, only in Classic View.

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About the Author:
Dave Taylor is known as an expert on both business and technology issues. Holder of an MSEd and MBA, author of twenty books and founder of four startups, he also runs a marketing company and consults with firms seeking the best approach to working with weblogs and social networks. Dave is an award-winning speaker and frequent guest on radio and podcast programs.

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