This is not going to work for those of you who don’t use macs.
For those of you who use apple computers…… To be honest, most of the time may not be much use……
Maybe a few of them are helpful, but the rest are just icing on the cake.
Before we begin, let’s clarify the name of each key and its position on the keyboard:
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Fn is the key in the bottom left corner of the keyboard.
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⇧ Shift on fn.
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The four keys to the right of fn are ^ Control, ⌥option(Alt), ⌘ Command and space, respectively.
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The key to the left of Q is ⇥ TAB.
You can easily change the file name and storage location of most files by clicking the window title.
Click on the title of the window, after the dialog ***, you can have the following operations:
- Press command +****d or Command + Shift +****d to move the file to the desktop in real time
- Press Command + Option + L (lowercase L, not I) to move the file to the Download folder in real time
More storage positions and their corresponding keys are as follows:
You can use these shortcuts to download things from the Web and save various files, but don’t get too used to them.
However, cap male has not figured out how to make the air delivery shortcut key, please big brain reader master don’t hesitate to give advice.
Dragging window titles also makes it easier to post things to apps like wechat.
Press ESC to cancel dragging
Command + TAB, when the menu appears, press command, move the mouse pointer to the program you want to exit, press Q to launch, press H to enable/disable minimization.
If you’re too lazy to move the mouse, command + TAB, hold command when the menu appears, then TAB or ‘(the key above TAB).
Of course, we can also try again pressing TAB or ‘what happens?
Command + ‘, which toggles in different Windows of the same program, is similar to Expose (three-finger slide) but faster.
Search for keyboard. Pref in Spotlight (Command + space) and press Enter.
Find “shortcut keys”, then “App shortcut keys”, and click the + to add/modify the shortcut keys.
The default shortcut for “float selected memos” is not easy to press, but it should work for memos readers (I’ve changed it to make it easier).
The ‘merge cells’ shortcut for numbers is also hard to press.
Well, whatever the fuck you do.
Finally, how to retrieve the wifi password stored on your Mac:
Command + Space opens Spotlight, type keychain, hit Enter.
Type the name of wifi into the search box in the upper right corner, search for the term “airport” in the results, and hit Enter.
Then click “Show password” and enter the local password to see the wifi password.
The toodles!