How do I remove a shortcut in Textmate? - browser

Whenever I hit CMD + R in TextMate (version 1.5.11), it opens Safari.
How do I disable that shortcut, or at least make it open Chrome instead?
Couldn't find anything on TextMate preferences, neither on system preferences's application shortcuts.

Related

Can VSCodeVim Ignore Windows Key Combination?

I have Windows+I set as a keyboard shortcut to open up chrome, but if I try to use that while keyboard focus is on VSCode with vscodevim enabled, it treats it as if I had just typed I by itself (and enters insert mode).
I'm running mate desktop manager on Arch Linux. The Win-I shortcut is set through system -> preferences -> hardware -> keyboard shortcuts.
I've tried adding the following to settings.json:
"vim.handleKeys": {
"<T-i>": false
}
I've also tried <Win-i>, <T-I>, <Win-I>, <Mod4-I>.
Is there a different syntax to specifiy windows key being pressed? Or a different way to have ideavim register that it's pressed and ignore the input? The key is displayed as Mod4 in the mate keyboard shortcuts menu.
I know I can map the chrome shortcut to something else like Alt+F3, but I'm hoping to keep it as Win+I if possible. Any help appreciated!
Try adding the following setting:
"keyboard.dispatch": "keyCode"
Restart vscode after that.

Shortcut to close a opened tab in android studio

What is the shortcut to close the opened tab in android studio?
I'm new to the android studio. I tried with CTRL+W. It's not working. I searched for a while. But I haven't get it. Any one please provide me the shortcut to close the opened tab.
You can try pressing CTRL+F4 in order to close opened tabs in Android Studio
As mentioned above, type CTRL + ALT + S to get into settings and in the keymap dialog search for Close, but the thing you want to reassign is
Close Active Editor
For Mac it is not set by default. Here is how I did it.
Android Studio 4.1 > Preferences > Keymap search for Close Active Editor right click > Add Keyboard Shortcut. Then assign anything you want. Alt+W is a good one.
If you right click on a tab header, the context menu shows you the current key binding next to the word Close (by default Ctrl+F4).
Follow the steps mentioned in other comments (type CTRL + ALT + S to get into settings and in the keymap dialog search for Close) and what you actually need to change is [editor tabs] / [close]
(android studio 3.6.1)
On a Mac, it's command + F4.
If you're like me, you may have to do command + fn + F4

Visual Basic 2013 - Pressing ALT gets me out of code

I just installed my Visual Basic and this is a problem I couldnt find an answer to. Everytime I press ALT it gets me out of code, and because I use SHIFT+ALT to change keyboards a lot while writing code, this is really disturbing to have to click in code again to be able to write.
Any ideas ?
Are you referring to the normal Windows way of accessing the menu via keyboard? This has nothing to do with Visual Studio; it will work similarly in almost any Windows application.
E.g. pressing Alt+F will open the File Menu etc. Just pressing Alt will highlight the menu (you should see the shortcut letters underlined for each item) and pressing a letter key will then open the menu. Instead, press Alt again to return to what you were doing before.

Open file location in GUI using keyboard only

I know about the
[ctrl] + [alt] + t
[ctrl] + f
[alt] + f1
shortcuts to bring up the standard system browsing tools, and I use them often. I am not satisfied with them (except the terminal...of course).
My question is: is there an equivalent to the Window's shortcut
[windows-key] + e
that brings up the "Computer" window? Having access to the GUI based file browser is nice, especially when I am literally browsing for a file in an unknown location.
pwd
ls
cd
gets a little old when you're not 100% sure what you're looking for.
Please answer the question in a manner that I could add your tip to the keyboard shortcut menu, which is found by running
gnome-keybinding-properties
at the command line on debian-type distributions. If you've got something I could grab from synaptic, I'd appreciate that as well.
Thanks.
p.s. I hate the mouse. Please don't tell me to double click the Computer icon on the desktop.
I guess your file manager is nautilus since you mentioned gnome.
can you add custom keyboard shotcut? if yes, add this command to a custom shortcut.
nautilus computer:///
btw
if you really hate mouse, you would like to try ranger. http://savannah.nongnu.org/projects/ranger
Into gnome-keybinding-properties, their is a home directory shortcut. Type
[your_shortcut_for_home_directory], <alt> + <up>, <alt> + <up>
(very quickly).

Is there any way of easily refreshing a website coded in G(Vim)?

I realized that I waste 10% of my time changing windows between Vim and Firefox.
Alt + Tab + F5 (and sometimes a get the wrong window).
Is there a way of making this task easier?
I thought of the following:
Embending vim to firefox (I think it is impossible).
Making a Vim shortcut which sends me to Firefox's window.
Any suggestions?
Technically, I guess this ain't proper answer, but You might benefit from these tools.
For Chrome - try LiveReload.
For Firefox - try XRefresh.
Here's a Vim shortcut to open the current file in Firefox. It should work on Ubuntu, though I'm not in front of my Linux machine to test. You can add it to your ~/.vimrc
map <Leader>p :!firefox %<CR><CR> " Preview the current html file in Firefox
If you're looking for varations on that same theme, there are quite a few similar tips on the Vim wiki. Check the duplicate links tip at the top and the "See Also" links at the bottom.
If you are on Windows, AutoHotKey is a good free option.
You could assign a key combination to activate the Firefox browser, send the F5 key to Firefox, and then return focus to Vim.
Benefits of AutoHotKey:
You could have logic that checks whether the Firefox is open, and if it is not open, open it.
You could use the AutoHotKey Window Spy tool to actually activate Firefox. Alt+Tab will fail if you've activated another window in between Vim and Firefox.
See for example:
http://www.autohotkey.com/docs/commands/WinActivate.htm
http://www.autohotkey.com/docs/Tutorial.htm

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