Article: It's the button that has a Windows icon in the taskbar.  By default, it's in the lower-left corner of your desktop. This displays a list of matching applications in the Windows Start menu. It's next to a purple icon with a yellow "X".  It's at the top of the Windows Start menu.  This displays the DirectX Diagnostic Tool. It's the first tab at the top of the DirectX Diagnostic Tool window.  This displays the "System Information" list. It's next to "DirectX Version" at the bottom of the "System Information" list.  The latest version of DirectX is DirectX 12. Click the other tabs at the top of the DirectX Diagnostic Tool, and then look at the box at the bottom of the window to see if there are any detected problems with DirectX.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Click the Windows Start menu . Type dxdiag. Click dxdiag. Click the System tab. Check your version of DirectX.
Article: This can be text-only or text and photos. If you're using Microsoft Word 2010 or earlier, you'll need to add the AutoText Gallery to the Quick Access Toolbar. Here's how:  Click the Office button in the upper left corner of the Word window and select Word Options. Click Customize. Select All Commands in the left dropdown selection box. Scroll down to the "AutoText entry" and double-click to move it to the right pane. Click OK to close the options window. It's at the top of Word. It's in the toolbar that runs along the top of the screen. A menu will expand. This opens your AutoText Gallery, which is where you'll find your AutoText in the future. It's at the bottom of the list. This opens a form. You can give the AutoText snippet a name, description, and other information to make it easy to identify when inserting text. This saves the selected snippet to your AutoText Gallery for later use.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Highlight the content that you want to make an AutoText entry. Click the Insert tab. Click the Quick Parts menu. Click the AutoText menu. Click Save Selection to AutoText Gallery. Fill out your AutoText preferences and click OK.
Article: You can power any number of redstone lamps from a single daylight sensor. Right-click to invert the sensor, then place a line of redstone dust extending from any side of it. Place short branches of redstone off of this line, with a redstone lamp at the end of each branch. When you reach the limit of the sensor's range (when the redstone is no longer glowing), place a redstone repeater to keep the power line going. Keep in mind the power signal will decrease as it brightens. If you have a long line, the lamps farthest away from the sensor will go out first as dawn approaches. Place three or four fence poles on top of each other to make one tall one, and top it with a redstone lamp. Place redstone dust on top of this lamp, then a daylight sensor on top of the redstone. Surround the redstone with more redstone lamps for extra light, then right-click the sensor to invert it. You can place a redstone lamp directly next to a night sensor to power it directly, with no need for redstone "wires." Bury the sensor two blocks deep in the floor, wall, or ceiling to make your lamps part of the room itself.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Create power lines from a single sensor. Build street lamps. Make lamps without redstone dust.