I use tab to fill out forms and people think I’m hackerman.
You pull out shift-tab and they will think you’re some Jedi that has jumped through time. I just go with it and tell them it’s beautiful and peaceful where I’m from, but I needed to show them the ways of the forms. May the forms be with you!
Win - Tab for the overview, you can then add virtual desktops in the top row. switching between them with Ctrl-Win-L/R-Arrow.
Works the same on the current KDE :-)
I have bound the switching to modifierkey (on the mouse)-Mousewheel L/R, so i can switch desktops with the mouse only :-)
Now if Windows and KDE would just remember which programs belong on which desktop, that would be nice.Ctrl+backspace deletes the previous word. Now if I could just form the muscle memory.
Yes, but it is also sometimes something different. I have it in muscle memory, and sometimes have to retype everything because I accidentally navigate the browser back one step…
I like Emacs’ kill shortcuts. Kill a line, kill a word, kill a paragraph
Though I don’t do much in Emacs other than code
I showed an extension that lets you do the same on a Mac to a non-technical friend of mine who works in marketing and he was like “wow I can’t believe it works” like it was the second coming or something, one day I’ll have to tell him about i3wm and tmux and vim…
This is actually built-in on macos now
https://www.theverge.com/24273664/apple-macos-sequoia-windows-snap-how-to
Oh shit there’s a shortcut to do that? I’ve just been dragging one window to the side and then clicking the other when the thingy pops up, like some kind of caveman! 😩
This is what I do. Without looking it up, I have a whisper of a thought that
win + arrow
is used to, like, rotate the screen or switch monitors or something…CTRL + ALT + {ARROW}
rotates the screenI cant seem to get that one to work, but ctrl + win + arrows changes the active desktop and minimizes all windows.
That’s a reverse keyboard shortcut.
Here’s another one: When you have multiple windows open, grab one by the title bar with a click-and-hold and shake it around with your mouse. This will cause all your open windows except the one you grabbed to minimize.
I don’t know how the fuck anyone is meant to discover that naturally, or what would possess anyone to even try. I think someone at Microsoft just put it in there as a joke, so people can incessantly post this exact same “did you know this thing about Windows???” thing on the internet constantly.
In other news, double clicking the window menu (in the upper left, aka the “staple box”, which later became the mini-icon in Windows 95 and later) to this very day is a shortcut to close a window that nobody who isn’t old enough to remember what 5.25" floppy disks looked like will know about. This is a holdover from, I believe, Windows 2.0. But it still works in modern Windows to this very day.
I have to disable the shake gesture on machines that I regularly use because I often trigger it by accident. I don’t even know how, but it happens often enough to be annoying.
In highschool I blew my HTML teacher’s mind when I showed her this. She had been manually resizing windows for years.
To be fair, window snapping in Windows is a rather recent feature. I think it was introduced in Windows 7.
Man just wait till you see what you can do with Win+Tab.
It’s like alt+tab but worse!
And Win+V
I don’t feel like that method is inferior, it’s just different. Especially depending on the kind of work you’re doing, keyboard or mouse may feel more efficient.
Same! And I’m a millennial.
The fact that Windows still doesn’t have a shortcut to move windows between Virtual Desktops is mind boggling to me. I had to download an AHK script just to replicate basic features included in KDE, Gnome and probably most of the tiling WMs.
MS software also doesn’t play nice with virtual desktops. Opening excel files or answering teams calls yanks you all over your workflow.
Alas, working an Excel job in a non-tech field, I fear I will suffer Windows the rest of my working life ☠️
To be fair, windows literally didn’t have virtual desktops until a version or two ago. Which is mind boggling given Linux had it in the 90s
It also didn’t have tabs in the file explorer for the longest time. I remember having to download some random exe from a dodgy site just to have them in W7
Ctrl+Win+[Left or Right Arrow]
That shortcut simply switches which virtual desktop is currently active and showing onscreen. What they mean is there is no shortcut to take the active window (in the active virtual desktop) and move that window into the next virtual desktop.
That seems to move your focus to the separate group of open programs rather than moving your focused program to the separate group which is how I read the request, but that’s one I’ve been offhandedly wondering about but too lazy to look up, so thank you.
Sometimes it’s something simple like CTRL-C, then CTRL-V and the person watching you is like: wait how did you do that?!
Haha I remember someone at a front desk grumbling about how they couldn’t find the clock, and without looking at their screen I asked them to press F11. The way they looked at me when that solved it was priceless.
You joke.
I had a hardcore boomer who worked mainframes - he was a mainframe wizard - refuse a redundancy payment (at age 60 - would have been a year plus wages). He was told if he didn’t take it, he would be moved to a team elsewhere. He shows up in my team and I had to teach him how to do copy paste. Then the shortcuts blew his mind.
He still used a pen and paper to change passwords (kept a small pile of them on his desk, and none were labeled but that’s another story).
You joke.
I highly doubt that was a joke. It is unsettlingly common among even those who use computers daily.
And then you absolutely blow their fucking mins with WIN+V
I’ve been a Linux user for so long. Clipboard history was a thing almost two decades before Windows got it. I don’t think it is coded to Win+V though – CTRL-ALT-V is what my muscle memory is telling me…
Middle mouse button paste is the bees knees though ;)
I have to use Windows computers from time to time. It’s so frustrating to middle click and nothing happens
Well, depends on the clipboard manager or desktop environment, what the default shortcut is. On KDE, it Win+V.
Ctrl+alt+V for Linux? Which distro?
I just switched to Mint and have been trying to find a way to do clipboard history on mine lol
What’s a windows key? Proper keyboards have modifier keys named shift, ctrl, meta, super and hyper.
Lol stop, y’all lost years ago. I press the Windows™️ key on my Linux machine all the time.
ಠ_ಠ
I’ve set up my windows key to handle all window-related shortcuts. 🙃
Shit, it even works on Plasma…
TIL…
Many Plasma default shortcuts mirror Windows
For the absolute longest time (at least from Windows 95 through Windows 7, perhaps even later version but I dunno on that), every now and then after you exit a game, you can’t properly drag and drop nor double click anything on the desktop.
Eventually I found a particular game that would consistently cause this issue, which got me wondering what all the game was doing upon exit. I theorized that maybe it left the keyboard buffer in something of a goofy state.
So, I started with the thought that Windows must be thinking that a key is still being held down when it wasn’t. And sure enough, just tapping the Esc key managed to refresh the keyboard buffer and resolve the issue.
You should easily be able to see the effects of this bug manually by holding down Esc and trying to use the mouse, stuff just ain’t gonna work right. So if you ever happen to encounter this bug, just tap the Esc key to refresh the keyboard buffer.
<unnecessarily generational>
Love it. I think we need a new community.
No boomers allowed
Haha, fuck yeah!
Millennials trying to act like Gen Xers don’t know shortcuts? Whatever.
More that Gen X doesn’t exist; it seems to go Boomers, Millenials, Gen Z
Gen X, the real Silent Generation. So silent that nobody notices us sneaking past, ensuring a smooth transition from the analog age to digital.
Em… Well…
Ikr? We were learning keyboard based commands because mice weren’t a thing at the time. Even filthy casuals picked up some over the decades
I remember those WordPerfect paper templates you’d put over the keyboard to list all the shortcuts.
Lotus 1-2-3
There are users from all generations who don’t know shortcuts. There are also users from all generations who do know shortcuts. In my experience, gen X/Y are more likely than other generations to know shortcuts. With that said, I still come across far more gen X who don’t know any than gen Y.
Though this all may be culture/region dependent.
no it’s the normal erasure of gen x from the timeline
The timeline goes
Old dead boomers
Dying wealthy boomers
Young poor boomers
Gen y
Millennials
Gen z
Gen alpha
Blame boomers. Millennials is their catchall term for whatever generation they’re complaining about regardless if it’s Millennials, Gen X, Z, Alpha, etc.
At the same time, I feel anyone under 25 describes anyone over 25 as boomer, so that ain’t helping either lol.
Gen Y = millennials
The normal erasure of Millennial Falcons from the timeline?
I read every comment and I’m pretty sure I’ve got something most of you don’t know. control and left or right will move by one word at a time in text. if you hold shift with this, you can highlight.
I find this is incredibly useful after I use Alt d or Control-L. in most browsers including most file browsers, this will take you to your address bar. then you can chop up your URL.
I did see somebody mention shift insert. I don’t know if they mentioned shift delete which cuts.
I had to write an essay in an exam setting once and all the keyboard controls like that were disabled. Worst 20 minutes ever
I would be so frustrated I might try to smoke a cigarette in the test
Long IT nerd here, I’ve known about those shortcuts for a long time. Its interesting as I left the IT industry about 12 years ago and work in an unrelated field. Half the time I talk to our tech support guys, I know more than them. My fellow colleaugues think I’m like Merlin the magician.
Even better:
Win + Space (Win or Super + Space in Linux also) changes keyboard languages. I’m not seeing that anywhere in here either.
I hate tripping that one. I actively remove my “alternate” keyboards so I never trip it. on windows, one of my emacs binds trips it. so frustrating.
Is this generational? I’m a millennial, 38 years old. I don’t know about most of these short cuts. I’m a mechanic, I use computers at work but mostly proprietary programs. I don’t use my computer at home except for bill paying or something else the necessitates using it.
Sort of, but of certainly not universal. I use common keyboard shortcuts all the time, but don’t know what the one OP was taking about was before just now.
But, older folks seem to never, ever use things like Ctrl+C or Ctrl+P, which drives me crazy. But I’ve also seen people in the last few years who double click links on websites, and aren’t retired yet.
Ultimately, YMMV.
Since we’re talking about Windows:
WinKey
+.
to open up the secret emoji/symbols toolbox. 🫛
Yes! Someone saw me add 😎 to a document I was grading once and it blew their mind. “Wait! What did you just do? How did you get that menu?” I try to teach people, but they almost never remember. They praise me for my navigation skills, but they don’t care to learn basic stuff like alt+tab/shift+alt+tab/win+tab.
Fun thing about the switch apps forward/backwards keys is shifted tab is back tab, so alt+tab is switch forward and alt+back tab is switch backwards
So useful when switching back and forth between two programs
I feel like shortcut knowledge is more about willingness to explore the machine than generations. I’m gen X.
I usually don’t use alt+tab, but alt+shift+tab is a new one for me, thanks!
I discovered this at work when I fat fingered Winkey + L. No work was done that day.
Which annoyingly only has a small subset of the emojis, making me have to use seach anyway.
Better than nothing I guess.Also it used to lag like crazy, idk if it still does.
I’ll have to try that, but I’ve been using
Win+;
. It opens an emoji picker and puts the focus in a search field so you can type “shrug” or something and often just hit Enter to choose the single result.It’s ; as in ;)
At least, thats how I like to think of it.
It’s the same. The windows shortcuts page has
Windows Key + Period (.) or Semicolon (;) - Open emoji panel.
Typing
(windows)
in Teams helpfully replaces the word with a dinosaur 🦖 icon.It does the same thing on KDE Plasma!