5/9/2019 0 Comments Word Control Shift 8 For MacAmaya keyboard shortcuts for Mac OSX. Amaya defines two kinds of keyboard shortcuts for Mac OS X: shortcuts using standard Apple modifier keys (ex. Cmd+C to copy the selection) and shortcuts using sequences (ex. Ctrl-t Ctrl-t to create a table). I've used Office 2007 for a while, but at work, I have to do with Word 2002. The thing I miss the most is the style possibility, and I discovered that there was already styles, even in a bit more primitive way. Since I often type activity reports, with Week, then day, then different things, I found quite useful the CTRL+ SHIFT+ S, which puts your cursor to the 'style' field, and where i have only to type 'Title1', 'Title2', etc., then to hit return, and I have my selected text in the wanted style. ![]() It's just available in some programs and not others, not system-wide. It just sucks because you can do it in both Adobe InDesign and Photoshop using Command + Shift + (+).but not Illustrator. The day Photoshop has superior type editing functionality than Illustrator, well, maybe the Adobe Illustrator team is just slacking. It's not like it's some unusual request. I'm 100 percent positive you used to be able to do it in older Illustrator versions. Currently the only way to do it is manually in the character palette options menu.really blows. It's just available in some programs and not others, not system-wide. It just sucks because you can do it in both Adobe InDesign and Photoshop using Command + Shift + (+).but not Illustrator. The day Photoshop has superior type editing functionality than Illustrator, well, maybe the Adobe Illustrator team is just slacking. ![]() It's not like it's some unusual request. I'm 100 percent positive you used to be able to do it in older Illustrator versions. Currently the only way to do it is manually in the character palette options menu.really blows. There are really several aspects to this and therefore several possible solutions. Areas of concern: • Typing in applications- document composition applications like Pages, Word. Spreadsheets and other specific apps like Excel, the various Adobe suites, and others. You probably guessed that each app or suite will have potentially it's unique way of handling super (and sub-) scripting, which is what you are referring to. • Typing in text apps, note-taking apps. • Typing in specific others like Terminal, Messaging, Email that are more closely associated with the OS and tied to specific OS character settings. • System wide setting of specific character combinations like 1st, 2nd, etc. These might also affect Web browser apps like the one I'm using now. Possible solutions: • Set System-wide superscripts. You would have to force superscripts for '1st, 2nd.' Or for the last numeric character typed before a space to force those following specific two letters as superscripts WHERE THEY OCCUR. I actually had this working, sorta nicely at one time, but then it stopped. Windows does this rather elegantly somehow. I still seem to have a character substitution in place for 0ᵀᴴ (e.g., 100th is typed as 0ᵀᴴ and put the '10' or other characters before it), as an example. You would also have to do this for common fractions like, '½, ¼, etc.' Mac's error correcting schema seems to occur automatically for specific combinations. Uncommon fractions would require manual intervention.
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