On May 10, 2016, at 09:48:38, Andy Lee <ag...@mac.com> wrote:
> 
> On May 9, 2016, at 5:30 PM, Quincey Morris 
> <quinceymor...@rivergatesoftware.com> wrote:
>> 
>> On May 9, 2016, at 13:50 , Andy Lee <ag...@mac.com> wrote:
>>> 
>>> I believe the old keyboard shortcut was ⌘0, which is now the toggle for 
>>> showing/hiding the Navigator pane.
>> 
>> I’m pretty sure it did what it now does, all the way back to Xcode 4.
> 
> That sounds right.  ⌘0 was definitely "Go to Project" in Xcode 3, so I guess 
> Xcode 4 is when they adopted the current pattern of logically grouped 
> shortcuts: ⌘(number) for the Navigator panes, ⌥⌘(number) for the inspector 
> panes, etc., with 0 being for show/hide.  Howard must be a long-time Xcode 
> user to remember the old shortcut.

He's not the only one who used command-0 all the time. These days, the closest 
equivalent for typing a partial file name to open it is using Open Quickly 
(command-shift-o).

But for getting to the project settings, I really miss having dedicated menu 
items for getting to them (I used command-option-p for project settings and 
command-option-e for target settings, I think - it's been years). It was a big 
dopy move to leave them out. Andy's suggestion of command-1, option-upArrow 
works, as long as you are very quick about releasing the option key so it 
doesn't annoyingly open in the assistant editor. Maybe only we drummers can do 
it. :)

--
Steve Mills
Drummer, Mac geek


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