In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (2024)

andreyf on Oct 13, 2009 | parent | context | favorite | on: 10 finger multi-touch UI designed to replace the m...


In my experience, OSX has much better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Windows does. A simple example: you'd like to force-kill the focused application. In OSX, you type command-option-esc (one hand), return, return (other hand). I don't know what it is in Vita, but in XP, it would require quite a bit of mousework.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (1)

deyan on Oct 13, 2009 | next [–]


Did you (all of you not just andreyf) seriously manage to degrade the discussion on the GUI into a OSX vs. Windows debate? Or perhaps my expectations are just way too high..

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (2)

andrewtj on Oct 13, 2009 | parent | next [–]


Straw, camel back... sorry

Keep expectations high and the community will self-correct.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (3)

andreyf on Oct 13, 2009 | parent | prev | next [–]


Sorry :(

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (4)

alexitosrv on Oct 13, 2009 | prev | next [–]


I can think in several counter examples:

In mac os x, - how to show the desktop with a keyboard shortcut ?

- how to maximize/minimize/restore a window with a keyboard shortcut (on windows you can press Alt+spacebar, and then x/n/r) ?

- how to efficiently copy/move files in finder with a keyboard shortcut ?

- how is better thought the fact that when you are in finder and then you press enter, you are going to rename a file? because in order to open/execute on a file you must press command+O...

And finally, the operation you asked can be performed on windows by pressing ctrl+shift+esc, and if you are in the process tab, spelling the first letters of the procname, then press delete and confirm.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (5)

absconditus on Oct 13, 2009 | parent | next [–]


"In mac os x, - how to show the desktop with a keyboard shortcut ?"

F11

"- how to maximize/minimize/restore a window with a keyboard shortcut (on windows you can press Alt+spacebar, and then x/n/r) ?"

There is no such thing as maximize in OS X. Minimize is command + m. I'm not sure how to restore with the keyboard.

"- how to efficiently copy/move files in finder with a keyboard shortcut ?"

Command + c is copy and command + v is paste. Command + x is cut, but there are rules governing when one can cut that I don't understand.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (6)

derefr on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


You can restore (in Snow Leopard, at least) by activating Expose, using the arrow keys to select the minimized window, and pressing Enter. It's not as simple if you've hidden the application's window set with Command+H, however (I still don't understand the purpose of that shortcut myself.)

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (7)

andrewtj on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


It's not that much more complicated to show a hidden app - Ctl+F3 to activate the Dock, use the arrow keys to select the App and hit return.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (8)

roundsquare on Oct 13, 2009 | parent | prev | next [–]


how is better thought the fact that when you are in finder and then you press enter, you are going to rename a file? because in order to open/execute on a file you must press command+O...

You should be careful of "windows bias" (or whatever, I just made up the term). Just because we do something one way in windows, does not mean its better, just what we are accustomed to.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (9)

joe_the_user on Oct 13, 2009 | prev | next [–]


The folks who say the Macintosh has better short-cuts don't get the fact that in Windows you can do anything with the keyboard, on the Macintosh, there are many things which you cannot do with the keyboard.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (10)

andrewtj on Oct 13, 2009 | parent | next [–]


Respectfully, it seems like every time I see this comment it's from a Windows power user who's not that familiar with OS X - can you please provide an example?

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (11)

joe_the_user on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


Application switching - what's the equivalent of alt-tab?Including resizing Restoring a minimizing application.

-- Selecting an arbitrary menu itemArrowing through a menu is key for me. I'm writing from memory but last I recall working on a mac, the menus were strictly mouse only.

-- What's the equivalent of the start button, giving a list of available I can select with the keyboard? I remember not being able to navigate the launch bar with the keyboard, only the mouse. And at that time, I Googled for a while for help on this.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (12)

andrewtj on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


Off the top of my head:

alt-tab == ⌘-tab

Restore == Ctl-F3, arrow key to window in Dock, return

Arbitrary menu item, depends:

Application Menu (left-handside text menus) == Ctl-F2, type enough unique letters to identify the menu (or use arrow keys), return, type enough unique letters to identify the item... repeat till you get to the item you want. If this annoys you, you can implement your own keyboard shortcuts in any native application.

Status Menu (right-handside icon menus) == Ctl-F8, arrows, return.

Equivalent of the start button? Not quite sure what you mean - activate Spotlight ⌘-[Space], type app name perhaps?

I assume you mean Dock when you say launch which is activated by Ctl-F3.

The only one I don't know how to do is fine-grain resizing of a window. If you use OS X though, you'll realise the UI paradigm isn't focused on fine-grained window control though.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (13)

joe_the_user on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


A few keys to get to a few menu items really doesn't work since you have to remember them. In windows, you can use the alt key to both arrow through the menu AND to learn the specific hot-keys.

Plus I actually suspect that a many application don't implement the keys you've mentioned since I was definitely at-sea in my efforts to use any keys.

But thanks, I'll have more ammunition the next time I'm stuck Osx-land.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (14)

andrewtj on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


Actually, the keyboard shortcuts do work; I'm pretty comfortable saying that since I use the OS everyday. Also, your suspicions are wrong - every native application implements these shortcut keys.

Don't take this the wrong way, but Windows skills don't translate to other platforms. OS X will feel different, weird and limited if you're not familiar with it as it doesn't do things the way you're used to.

To be honest, I rarely use most of these shortcut keys because I define my own.

A basic example is that it's two keys to start a VPN session on my machine as that's something I do frequently.

A more complicated one is as at the moment I'm doing work on a site that includes screenshots of itself, I have a shortcut key defined that takes a series of screen grabs from different pages in Safari at the appropriate size, converts them to PNG and sticks them in the appropriate folder. Huge time saver.

In short, it seems to me OS X can do anything with a keyboard shortcut that you'd like it to.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (15)

technocoreai on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Application menu items are searchable with the Help/Search widget, which can be opened with cmd-shift-/.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (16)

mmelin on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


And if you really want to do fine-grained resizing, just install MercuryMover.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (17)

username on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


MercuryMover is another $20 add-on.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (18)

sid0 on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | prev | next [–]


Lock the computer.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (19)

andrewtj on Oct 13, 2009 | root | parent | next [–]


No default. On my computer it was Ctl-F8, Ctl-L which was setup using the built-in Keyboard short configuration tool. Most of the time I just used hot corners though. That said, I no longer work in an environment where I need that kind of functionality so that combination no longer works.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (20)

philwelch on Oct 13, 2009 | parent | prev | next [–]


If it's that much at issue, you can configure Mac OS X for full keyboard control as well.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (21)

trebor on Oct 13, 2009 | prev | next [–]


Since XP, when an application froze the window itself would render in spite of the frozen/omitted contents. So when the titlebar got an ending "(not responding)" tag it is easily closed with one click of the close button, then another of "end now" as confirmation.

And there's always alt-f4.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (22)

jcl on Oct 13, 2009 | prev | next [–]


In XP, control-shift-escape (almost the same key combo as OSX) brings up the task manager, where you can kill whatever you want using the keyboard. By default, it comes up with the current application selected, so you can press tab then space to kill it.

As this can all be done with one hand, does XP therefore have better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than OSX? ;)

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (23)

elblanco on Oct 14, 2009 | prev [–]


in XP, I dunno if there is a quick way. But Ctrl+shift+ESC brings up Task Manager. Arrow down to the task you want to kill. Hit the other crazy menu key that MS added to keyboards (the one between the right Alt and Ctrl whatever it's called) and choose how you want to kill the task, hit enter.

Other than the arrowing down bit, it's about the same.

In my experience, OSX has *much* better thought-out keyboard shortcuts than Wind... (2024)
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