Article: The Android power button is located on the upper right-hand side of the device. It's the app that resembles a gray gear located in the app drawer. To access the app drawer. Press the home button at the bottom-center of the screen to go to your Home screen, then tap the apps icon or swipe up on the small up arrow. It's near the bottom of the menu. It's in the middle of the page. It's at the bottom of the page under the list of currently connected accounts. It's the white icon with a multi-colored "G". Make sure it's the same account you used to backup your iPhone with Google Drive. Once you have signed in to Google on your smartphone, everything you have backed up to Google Drive will automatically restore to your device. If your files don't restore automatically, follow the steps in the next part to manually restore your device from the Google Drive app. Google Drive typically comes pre-installed on Android devices. If it's not on your device, you can download it from the Google Play Store {"smallUrl":"https:\/\/www.wikihow.com\/images\/1\/1e\/Androidgoogleplay.png","bigUrl":"\/images\/thumb\/1\/1e\/Androidgoogleplay.png\/26px-Androidgoogleplay.png","smallWidth":460,"smallHeight":531,"bigWidth":"26","bigHeight":"30","licensing":"<div class=\"mw-parser-output\"><p>I edited this screenshot of an Android icon\n<\/p><p>License: <a rel=\"nofollow\" class=\"external text\" href=\"http:\/\/en.wikipedia.org\/wiki\/Fair_use\">Fair Use<\/a><br>\n<\/p><\/div>"}.
Question: What is a summary of what this article is about?
Turn on your new Android smartphone. Open your Android's Settings . Tap Cloud and accounts. Tap Accounts. Tap ＋Add account. Tap Google. Type the email address for your Google account and tap Next. Type your password and tap Next.

Problem: Article: For example, if you want to assign a command that does something when you press the key combination of Ctrl+E, you would type ^e. Each lowercase letter represents its own key, while special keys have their own symbols:   + = ⇧ Shift   ^ = Ctrl   ! = Alt   # = ⊞ Win (Windows key)  Click here for a complete list of key commands. Any key or key combination you typed needs to be followed by ::.  So in our example, the first line of our code would look like:  ^e:: You'll type the command for what will happen with then hotkey is pressed on the line below the two colons. You can indent the line by pressing "Tab" or by typing several spaces You don't have to indent the command line but it will keep your code organized and easy to read if you have errors later. The Send command will automatically type a message when a Hotkey is triggered. Anything you type after the comma will be typed automatically when you press the assigned Hotkey. For our example, if you wanted to include the message "wikiHow is awesome!" your code would look like:   ^e::     Send, wikiHow is awesome{!}   Special characters, like the exclamation mark, must be enclosed in braces { } so it isn't confused with the symbol for the "Alt" key. The Return command denotes the end of a command and stops the code from going to the lines below. Your finished code should look like:  ^e::     Send, wikiHow is awesome{!} Return Click "File" in the menu bar at the top of Notepad and click "Save" in the drop-down menu. This will save the code you've added to the script file. You can close Notepad once your work has been saved. Double-click the script file on your desktop to run the script. You'll see a green AutoHotkey icon appear in your system tray on the bottom-right of your screen. This indicates that an AutoHotkey script is active. Open a new word processing app or any app you can type text and press your Hotkey combo. In our example, if you press Ctrl+E you'll see the text "wikiHow is awesome!" instantly appear.
Summary: On a new line, type the code for the keyboard shortcut you want to assign. Type two colons after the keys you assigned. Press ↵ Enter to go to the next line and press Tab ↹ to indent. Type Send, and then type a message. Press ↵ Enter to go the next line and type Return. Save your script. Run the script. Test your Hotkey.

You should now have 6 strands of thread next to your plait. Select 2 (different colors will create a striped effect), pull them to the left of the plait, and smooth the other 4 down next to it.
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One-sentence summary --
Count 6 strands next to your braid.