Take too much time doing that, and it kind of defeats the purpose of using shortcuts in the first place. For more obscure shortcuts, you might also figure them out by selecting the corresponding actions through a program’s menu bar, where they might have shortcuts listed alongside them.īut in a lot of cases, useful keyboard shortcuts are completely hidden from view, so the only way to learn them is by looking through support documentation, installing clunky keyboard learning tools, or hunting for help on the web. I imagine that a lot of us had basic shortcuts drilled into our heads when were learning to use computers: Copying and pasting (Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V), undoing and redoing (Ctrl-Z, Ctrl-Y), maybe even finding text in a page (Ctrl-F) and selecting all text (Ctrl-A). Why do these shortcuts feel-for most of us, at least-so revelatory? Probably because there’s no easy way to learn them. Get more tech advice like this in your inbox with Jared’s Advisorator newsletter.
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