Activating Underlined Keys in Newer Windows Versions

If you’re on an older version of Windows, this feature is automatic, but later versions don’t have this feature on by default.

Here’s how to activate the feature if it isn’t already on.

Select Start icon or the Windows key. Choose Settings (gear icon). Select Ease of Access. Scroll down to the Interaction heading and select Keyboard. Under Change how keyboard shortcuts work, turn on the Underline access keys when available toggle. Close the window to save your changes. Now, in menus, the keys you can use with the Alt key will have underlines when you hold the Alt key. Keep holding down Alt to keep making selections within menus. For example, hold Alt and press F to open a File menu. Keep holding Alt and press W to open a new window.

Modern Apps

More recent programs are doing away with the customary menu bar that we’re used to seeing in Windows XP and earlier versions of Windows. 

Even some programs in Windows 7 have this more modern, menu-less look. Nevertheless, you can still use the Alt+letter shortcut in Windows 10. In many applications, the letters don’t have underlines, but the feature still works the same way.