Preface, About this guide, Other documentation you may need – Dell PowerEdge 2550 User Manual

Page 80: Typographical conventions

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Preface

Dell™ PowerEdge™ 2550 Systems Installation and Troubleshooting Guide

About This Guide

This guide is intended for anyone who wants to upgrade or troubleshoot a Dell™ PowerEdge™ 2550 system. Before calling Dell for technical assistance, follow 
the recommended procedure(s) in this guide to solve most hardware and software problems yourself.

Other Documentation You May Need

In addition to this Installation and Troubleshooting Guide, the following documentation is included with your system:

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The User's Guide, which describes system features and technical specifications, the Dell OpenManage Server Assistant CD, and the System Setup program.

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The Setting Up Your System sheet provides general instructions for setting up your system.

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The Dell OpenManage™ Server Agent documentation describes the server management software, including alert messages issued by the software.

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Dell PowerEdge System Information document contains important safety, regulatory, and warranty information.

You may also have one or more of the following documents.

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Operating system documentation is included with the system if you ordered the operating system software from Dell. This documentation describes how
to install (if necessary), configure, and use the operating system software.

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Documentation is included with any options you purchase separately from the system. This documentation includes information that you need to
configure and install these options in your Dell system.

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Technical information files—sometimes called "readme" files—may be installed on the hard-disk drive to provide last-minute updates about technical
changes to the system or advanced technical reference material intended for experienced users or technicians.

Typographical Conventions

The following list defines (where appropriate) and illustrates typographical conventions used as visual cues for specific elements of text throughout this
document:

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Interface components are window titles, button and icon names, menu names and selections, and other options that appear on the monitor screen or
display. They are presented in bold.

Example: Click OK.

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Keycaps are labels that appear on the keys on a keyboard. They are enclosed in angle brackets.

Example: <Enter>

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Key combinations are series of keys to be pressed simultaneously (unless otherwise indicated) to perform a single function.

Example: <Ctrl><Alt><Enter>

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Commands presented in lowercase bold are for reference purposes only and are not intended to be typed when referenced.

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."

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Filenames and directory names are presented in lowercase bold.

Examples: autoexec.bat and c:\windows

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Syntax lines consist of a command and all its possible parameters. Commands are presented in lowercase bold; variable parameters (those for which
you substitute a value) are presented in lowercase italics; constant parameters are presented in lowercase bold. The brackets indicate items that are
optional.

Example: del [drive:] [path] filename [/p]

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Command lines consist of a command and may include one or more of the command's possible parameters. Command lines are presented in the Courier
New font.

Example: del c:\myfile.doc

NOTE: Documentation updates are sometimes included with the system to describe changes to the system or software. Always read these updates
before consulting any other documentation because the updates often contain information that supersedes the information in the other documents.

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