On a UK keyboard, @ is Shift-' (hence Ctrl-Shift-' is also Ctrl-Shift-@). It's on the right of the keyboard, between ; and #. I think the symbols layout is different on US and other keyboards.
As most of my categories (GTD contexts) start with an @ symbol, as you've no doubt spotted, the use of the @ key helps me to remember this hotkey. The other thing I've tried to do with my customisations is make the key combinations a little more consistent. I try to use Alt-Shift for for hotkeys which edit task parameters, but Ctrl-Alt for any hotkeys used to navigate or change my view. Again, this level of consistency helps me to remember my hotkey combinations. Stéph On Thursday, 25 October 2018 14:17:34 UTC+1, [email protected] wrote: > > Thanks for the reply. In looking at your modifier key and key combination > list, I saw Ctrl+Shift+@. How do you get @ on a Windows keyboard? > > On Wednesday, October 24, 2018 at 10:35:55 AM UTC-5, Stéph wrote: >> >> Hello zel... >> >> I produced this a while ago, but I think I took the shortcut keys list >> from the MLO manual (list of "hot keys"), whereas the hotkey list I took >> from the Tools-Options-Hotkeys menu in MLO itself. A lot of the >> configurable hotkeys in the options list overwrite the default shortcut >> keys, but not all of them do. So, in column H you can look at the default >> values for the ones which get overwritten or you can filter out all the >> default ones which are overwritten by your personal hotkey settings. >> >> The Line No. (column B) tells you what order these are listed in the >> hotkey settings list and the shortcut key helpfile list, so you can re-sort >> the Excel list to match. >> >> Hope that helps and doesn't add to the confusion. Remember, though, this >> might not exactly match the current lists in MLO options and the help-file, >> as I produced this quite a long time ago. >> >> Stéph >> >> >> >> On Wednesday, 24 October 2018 07:24:30 UTC+1, [email protected] wrote: >>> >>> I notice in the spreadsheet you break out the same modifier key with key >>> combinations more than once and label them as part of either a "Hotkey" or >>> "Shortcut keys" set. You have a column to note that some shorcut keys are >>> "Superseded by hotkey setting". I'm not sure I understand this duality. >>> >>> >>> >>> On Tuesday, October 2, 2018 at 10:55:37 AM UTC-5, Stéph wrote: >>>> >>>> Here's a list I created. It's a little incomplete, at little out of >>>> date and it include changes I made to some of the hotkey settings. >>>> >>>> It doesn't have recent additions like Alt-Z (expand/collapse properties >>>> pane), Alt-Q (toggle Markdown note formatting) and Ctrl-i (insert a tab >>>> character at the cursor position). >>>> >>>> Still, it may be a useful starting point for you. >>>> >>>> Stéphane >>>> >>>> >>>> On Monday, 1 October 2018 09:50:33 UTC+1, Rick Maedler wrote: >>>>> >>>>> I need a "cheat sheet" I can conveniently refer to. >>>>> How to print the hot key list? >>>>> >>>> -- You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "MyLifeOrganized" group. To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email to [email protected]. To post to this group, send email to [email protected]. Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/mylifeorganized. To view this discussion on the web visit https://groups.google.com/d/msgid/mylifeorganized/e6b1db16-523c-4366-ae51-36b5d2288997%40googlegroups.com. For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.
