Did I get your attention with that title? Just wondering.
A smart way to learn keyboard shortcuts
One of my pet peeves is the scope of keyboard shortcuts. They are awesome if I learn them, but before I do, they just taunt me; ever wondering which ones would be helpful, and which I don’t need to concern myself with.
Safari, Mail, and Finder are three apps I’ve learned to focus on for my shortcut study. These apps I use all the time. There’s no need to use a mouse for, say, creating a new tab, archiving finished e-mail, or creating a new folder. These are super easy and fast once you learn the right keyboard shortcuts.
If you are new to learning shortcuts, start with examples like those. You don’t want to bog yourself down in other less-frequented commands like closing all windows in Safari (which there is a keyboard shortcut for). You want to take the steps to reinforce very useful commands that matter to you the most often.
Here’s how to cheat learning shortcuts
I love utilities as simple and smart as CheatSheet. The app serves one purpose: to help you learn the commands of any app in the most user-friendly imaginable way.
The app is free. Download it right now, and add it to your login items. My thanks are in order to Stefan Fürst for this remarkable, simple app. And more thanks to MacStories for sharing the joyous news that this utility exists.
And here is a helpful reference for the keyboard symbols:

These symbols are on most Mac keyboards. Use the image guide above as a reference for the symbols you see in manuals and how-to guides that you easily forget.


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