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@AdamS @BrightBricks Very cool. This gives me a few ideas. Thanks for sharing.
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@landedstar Same. Though I think my familiarity comes more from Gmail, which were copied from vi.
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@motherfuton @snookca and for me, I’ve noticed my use of these types of shortcuts contextually changes when I’m using my extended desktop keyboard vs my MacBook’s.
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@sph This is a good one to know that I’ve only learned recently.
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@plasticmind You’re not using something to randomly auto-generate the majority of your passwords by now?
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@stop For me, I have certain patterns of shortcuts I use very rapidly in Gmail that I only know by muscle memory. If I think about them too much, I can’t remember them.
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@plasticmind Well, yeah, those too. Though I think there are only two or three that I type often enough to commit to muscle memory. The rest are auto-filled, and I could never recite them.
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@snookca Blissfully unaware that a keyboard shortcut for this existed. I think I instinctively double click then drag to select by word.
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@itsdavidhughes Ah – I do this one too frequently when I actually want a file on my desktop instead. My default muscle memory includes Ctrl.
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Are there keyboard shortcuts you use so often, only your fingers and muscles know them, and you’d never be able to tell someone what they are without looking them up?
(And you probably need to be directly behind the keyboard to type them?)
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@typographica Forgive me – I somehow hadn’t seen prior years, so a review of 2018’s typefaces posted in Dec 2019 appeared out of context for me. Although, now that you ask about skipping, I don’t see favorites posted for 2009 and 2010?
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@typographica 18?