developer.apple.com— These are part of Apple's Human Interface guidelines for developers but they serve as a good reference of the keyboard shortcuts for OS X.
Oct 11, 2006View in Crawl 4
Apple seem to have missed the point of a GUI. By keeping toolbars and buttons down to a minimum they force users to use the menus, or more usually the keyboard shortcuts.
You could print to pdf, and keep it in the dock? And after a few days you will learn the ones you need most. Keep the pdf around for later when you find you need a new one?
cmd+option+ctrl+8 is for accessibility, it helps people who have problems with contrast and their vision. I've met a few people who used it all of the time. Not to mention its fun to do to public terminals... esp. when over Apple Remote Desktop, I love to watch people freak out by opening photobooth
thirdprizeOct 12, 2006
Apple seem to have missed the point of a GUI. By keeping toolbars and buttons down to a minimum they force users to use the menus, or more usually the keyboard shortcuts.
rabidbadgerOct 12, 2006
You could print to pdf, and keep it in the dock? And after a few days you will learn the ones you need most. Keep the pdf around for later when you find you need a new one?
rumbleOct 12, 2006
I think you mean "you're" right (not "your")
r00kieOct 12, 2006
cmd+option+ctrl+8 is for accessibility, it helps people who have problems with contrast and their vision. I've met a few people who used it all of the time. Not to mention its fun to do to public terminals... esp. when over Apple Remote Desktop, I love to watch people freak out by opening photobooth
r00kieOct 12, 2006
How else would you figure out shortcuts with no menu selection. The arrow key options are a good example of this.
nimbuscottOct 12, 2006
option, command, FI was looking for that in the Finder.Thanks!
gyveOct 12, 2006
um what about CMD+SHIFT+U to open the utilities folder?
sanctityOct 13, 2006
It's good, but there are more shortcuts out there...