In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Click the ab button on the left-hand side of the window. Click and drag your mouse down and right to draw an outline of the text box, then release the mouse button when the text box is the proper size.  Ideally, your text box will be significantly longer than it is tall. Click once the text box to select it, then press Ctrl+C to copy it. Press Ctrl+V twice to do so. You should see your pasted text boxes appear in the upper-right side of the page.  If prompted to create a new control array after pasting in a text box, click No. Click and drag the text box in the top-left side of the page down to the bottom slot, then move the second text box from the top-left side of the page into the middle slot. You should now have a stack of three text boxes. The order in which you do this is important; if you place the text box you pasted second in the middle, it will cause your coding later to malfunction. To do so:   Click a text box. Click the text field to the right of the "Text" heading in the "Properties" pane on the right side of the window. Press Delete. Repeat with the other two text boxes. Click the A button in the left-hand toolbar, then do the following:   Resize the label box to your preferred size. Select the label box, then copy it. Paste twice the label box. Click and drag each label box to sit to the left of each text box. To do so:   Click the top label box. Click the text box to the right of the "Caption" heading in the "Properties" pane on the right side of the window. Type in Number 1. You'll label them like so:   Click the middle label box, then change its caption to Number 2. Click the bottom label box, then change its caption to Result. This isn't necessary, but it will make your calculator more visually appealing:   Select a label box. Click the "BackStyle" drop-down box in the "Properties" pane. Click Transparent in the drop-down menu. To change the text that appears at the top of the calculator's window when you run it, do the following:   Click a blank space on the form. Click the "Caption" header's text box in the "Properties" pane. Type in Simple Calculator (or whatever you want to name the calculator).
Summary: Open the "Text Box" tool. Create a text box. Copy the text box. Paste in the text box twice. Arrange the text boxes in a stack. Remove the text boxes' default text. Create three label boxes. Place the label boxes to the left of the text boxes. Edit the top label box's caption. Edit the other two label boxes' captions. Make the label boxes transparent. Title your calculator.

In one sentence, describe what the following article is about: Annual wildflowers grow and bloom 2-3 months after their seeds are planted, but usually die after 1 season. These flowers bloom for about 2 months before dying with the first frost. Choose from popular options like:  Zinnias, which have bright pink daisy-like blooms Orange cosmos, flowers with vibrant orange petals and yellow centers Prairie asters, small flowers with delicate purple petals Evening primroses, small, cup-shaped blooms that are usually yellow or pink African daisies, which may have orange, pink, purple, red, white, or yellow petals Perennial wildflowers will not bloom until a full season after they are planted, but they can last for decades. Perennials only bloom for about 2 weeks a year, but their roots are winter-hardy and produce growth annually. Plant interesting perennial wildflowers like:  Blanket flowers, which are similar to sunflowers with red and yellow petals Blazing star flowers, which have unique, long purple blooms Forget-me-nots, small flowers with rounded blue petals Wild yarrow flowers, which have clusters of tiny white blooms Coneflowers, yellow or blue blooms also known as echinacea Biennial wildflowers bloom in their second season like perennials, but the flowers die with the first frost the way that annual wildflowers do. Biennial wildflowers seed heavily so there is a good chance of them developing into perennials. Plant beautiful biennial choices like:  Foxgloves, flowers with tall stems and purple, bell-shaped blooms Chicory flowers, delicate blue flowers in the dandelion family Sweet William flowers, which have white blooms with fuschia-colored centers Hollyhocks, flowers that bloom on tall stems in a variety of colors
Summary:
Plant annual wildflowers if you want fast-blooming plants. Grow perennial wildflowers for slow but long-lasting plants. Cultivate biennial wildflowers if you want plants with a 2 year life-cycle.