Maybe with the new library we can make cheat codes like "CTRL + X + W + i+
k+ i + D + e + v + T + e + a +m + R + o +x" in order to take over the wiki
:)

Thanks,
Caty

On Wed, Aug 2, 2017 at 8:11 AM, Paul Libbrecht <[email protected]> wrote:

>
> Really a good idea to address this!
> So my +1.
>
> However, I think it would get more +1 if “see sequence combos for example”
> is made clear to me.
> My problem with the current keybinding is that it conflicts with things
> which I expect to work in each web-page. In particular cmd-G which I expect
> to be “find next” and which works on all websites I regularly use except
> XWikis.
>
> thanks in advance.
>
> Paul
>
>
> > On 26 Jul 2017, at 22:50, Vincent Massol <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > Hi devs,
> >
> > We’re currently using http://www.openjs.com/scripts/
> events/keyboard_shortcuts/ but it has some limitations. Clement and I
> tried to find some unused combinations of keys that works on Mac and Unix
> and we couldn’t find any that worked with it. It also doesn’t support
> having combinations with several letters for example.
> >
> > For example we could imagine having H+H+H for turning on/off hidden
> documents (as a developer key sequence since it’s not a user use case).
> >
> > I’d like to propose using https://dmauro.github.io/Keypress/ which is
> under the Apache 2 license and that seems to work well on Mac and Unix and
> it’s very powerful.
> >
> > See sequence combos for example.
> >
> > The API look simple and nice and I don’t think it would be hard to
> continue support our data structure inside the “shortcuts” variable to make
> it work with it.
> >
> > WDYT?
> >
> > Thanks
> > -Vincent
> >
>
>

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