Quoth Joshua Davies,

However, all three shortcuts have the same effect (which is to raise what
appears to be the first window I opened).

  It's actually a useful feature.

The first time you press the shortcut key, the active window gets assigned that shortcut. Subsequent keypresses focus that window. You can also set a particular shortcut from Options in the titlebar menu.

The reason it looks to you like the shortcuts all raise the same window is that each initial shortcut invocation happens while the window is active so they're bound to that window.

Example: Firefox is active. I press shortcut1. The Options titlebar menu shows that the shortcut is active for that window with a diamond symbol.

Then I focus urxvt and press shortcut2. The Options titlebar menus shows that the shortcut is active for urxvt with the diamond and that shortcut1 is active for another window by showing a tick.

Pressing shortcut1 jumps back to Firefox. Pressing shortcut2 jumps back to urxvt.

Clearing a shortcut is most easily accomplished by opening a dummy window, setting the shortcut for it then closing it.


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