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<div style="font-family:sans-serif"><div style="white-space:normal"><p dir="auto">He meant that to produce the left square bracket on the German keyboard, he needs to press alt-5 (option-5 if you will). So how do you produce a shortcut that itself requests the alt key to be hold. Will the alt key be recognized doubly, once to produce the bracket and then to produce the shortcut? I gather he has to remap these shortcuts to completely other keys.</p>
<p dir="auto">On 30 Sep 2020, at 17:23, Bill Cole wrote:</p>
<blockquote style="border-left:2px solid #777; color:#777; margin:0 0 5px; padding-left:5px"><p dir="auto">On 30 Sep 2020, at 7:58, Charlie Clark wrote:<br>
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<blockquote style="border-left:2px solid #777; color:#999; margin:0 0 5px; padding-left:5px; border-left-color:#999"><p dir="auto">Increase indentation cmd + [ becomes be alt + cmd + 6 on my keyboard<br>
And I've no idea how to get alt + cmd + [ because I'd need alt twice!</p>
</blockquote><p dir="auto">Typically "Alt" (common on Windows keyboards) is mapped to the Mac "Option" key rather than "Command" (a.k.a. "cloverleaf".) Does your keyboard have a 3rd modifier key of some sort, i.e. Control, Alt, and Something Else? I know that Windows keyboards usually have a Windows key, which is often mapped to Mac's Command.<br>
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-- <br>
Bill Cole<br>
bill@scconsult.com or billcole@apache.org<br>
(AKA @grumpybozo and many *@billmail.scconsult.com addresses)<br>
Not Currently Available For Hire<br>
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