
- #USED TO IMPLEMENT KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS ON MAC KEYBOARDS. PLUS#
- #USED TO IMPLEMENT KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS ON MAC KEYBOARDS. WINDOWS#
#USED TO IMPLEMENT KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS ON MAC KEYBOARDS. WINDOWS#
I also disable "When switching to an application, switch to a Space with windows open for that application", otherwise clicking on a Dock icon jumps me to another Space when I just want to have the app activated. Since the total count is spread across display heads, I create 5 on my left screen and 5 on my right one. Make sure to disable "Automatically rearrange Spaces based on most recent use" under Mission Control pref pane to keep them predictable. You don't even have to have a third party app to snap left||right or maximise via the keyboard, as these are available (behind Option either in the menu or when hovering over the traffic lights, but once you bind them they're always there, example is my bindings):Ĭtrl+Option+Left: Move Window to Left of ScreenĬtrl+Option+Right: Move Window to Right of ScreenĪnd for multihead users there's "Move to ".Īgain in Keyboard pref pane, Shortcuts tab, under Mission Control there's also Switch to Desktop 1-N keyboard shortcuts but you first have to create as many virtual desktops (a.k.a Spaces) as you want to have all the shortcuts show up.
#USED TO IMPLEMENT KEYBOARD SHORTCUTS ON MAC KEYBOARDS. PLUS#
On the plus side, however, after a few weeks of this on Windows, I booted into a FreeBSD desktop and could navigate the system pretty well :) Some more details here: īeing able to map any menu item for any app in the Keyboard pref pane, Shortcuts tab by typing the exact label (case sensitive) is crazy. It's painful and I miss the macOS consistency a lot. I'm trying to retrain my hands and adapt to the non-macOS shortcuts. Recently, though, and because that setup is problematic at times and because I decided to remove macOS altogether from my machine. You can see my AHK configuration here if you are interested in adopting something similar:

For months, I fought those and tried to use macOS-like shortcuts on Windows. The different shortcuts on Windows were and still are super-painful.

Until I tried to actually move off of macOS last year. I like how someone else described the "right side of the keyboard" as "keyboard Siberia" - I have not touched it for years and have not missed any of those special keys in minimalistic keyboards that don't have them. And the pervasive Emacs-like text navigation shortcuts throughout the system are productivity boosters. something that you can't appreciate until you experience it. The dedicated Cmd key for most operations (which doesn't conflict with, say Ctrl+C in the terminal) is super-convenient. but once you have bought into them, they are kind of thing that turn into a deal-breaker when trying to move away from macOS. The macOS shortcuts seem like an easy thing to dismiss.
