![]() ![]() If you find that the shortcut you assigned doesn't work, or does something unexpected, it may be that the keyboard shortcut you chose is already assigned to a different command. Keyboard shortcuts on macOS work by scanning the menus from left-to-right looking for a menu command matching the shortcut pressed. When you return to Scrivener or Scapple, the new keyboard shortcut should be up and running. Repeat steps 4 through 7 for each keyboard shortcut you'd like to add, and then you can close System Settings when you're done. Click Done (or Add on macOS 12.0 or older).Click in the Keyboard Shortcut text field and then hold down the combination of keys that you want for the new shortcut.If you wanted to change the keyboard shortcut for the Edit ▸ Paste and Match Style menu command, you would type "Paste and Match Style". menu item, you would type "Image from File." in this text field (including the ellipses). For instance, if you wanted to add a keyboard shortcut to Scrivener's Edit ▸ Insert ▸ Image from File. This should exactly match the name of the menu item in the software (capitalisation matters). In the Menu Title text field, enter the exact name of the command you want to add.Click on the + button, and select "Scrivener" or "Scapple" from the Application dropdown menu in the dialogue box.button (on older operating systems than 13.0, this will instead be a tab called "Shortcuts"). Navigate to the Keyboard section of System Settings and click the Keyboard Shortcuts.From the Apple menu in the top left corner of your screen, choose System Settings. ![]() So, if you would like to change the key combinations assigned to commands in the Scrivener and Scapple menus, or if you want to add a keyboard shortcut to a command that doesn't have one, here's how: Fortunately, the ability to change or assign keyboard shortcuts to menu items is built right into macOS itself, although it's easy to miss. There may be certain menu items that you find yourself using a lot for which there is no keyboard shortcut, or for which you find the keyboard shortcut overly convoluted. Since the macOS 13.0 Ventura upgrade, System Preferences are now called System Settings. ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |