I'm getting really tired of this "shortcut" in Illustrator where you press "escape" and the window changes view mode from full screen/maximized to another.
Illustrator lists it as "Exit Full Screen Mode" in this article here. But the option does not exist under Edit > Keyboard shortcuts.
Does anyone know how to disable this apparent "feature"?
Related
The arrow keys navigation works fine when NVDA is off, but as soon as I open NVDA in the background I can't use it to navigate in tab groups.
Did you ever experience this and do you have any suggestions on how to resolve it? Thank you.
The role is set to 'presentation', I tried changing it to tablist and it does not work. Role 'tab' alters the entire navigation behavior of the tab group so I want to avoid that as the expected behavior is to navigate with left/right arrow keys.
It would be helpful to have some code posted, otherwise we're just guessing.
When you tab to the tab navigator does the focus move to the tab that is selected within the group? (When tabbing to it the first time, I presume the first tab is selected.) Once the tab navigator has focus, then you can use the left/right arrow keys to navigate to the other tabs (when NVDA is not running)?
(It's unfortunate that pattern is called a "tab" which is confusing when also talking about the tab key)
I would first start with making sure you're following the "tab navigator" design pattern. If everything works as explained in that design pattern, in particular, the "Keyboard Interaction" section, then it sounds like you don't have the roles set on the right elements.
The behavior you're describing sounds like the left/right arrow keys are going to NVDA instead of to the tab navigator. You didn't say what happens when you press left/right when NVDA is running. Are characters read one by one? That would definitely mean the left/right arrow keyboard events are going to NVDA.
If that's true, then you don't have the role="tablist" set on the right element (and possibly role="tab" is not set on the right elements.) Confirm again you're following the design pattern.
When you have role="tablist", that will automatically switch NVDA from "browse mode" (where keyboard events are sent to NVDA) to "forms mode" (where keyboard events are sent to your application). When keyboard events are sent to your application, the left/right arrow keys should work just like when NVDA is not running.
You can see a list of roles that cause NVDA to switch modes automatically for you at "Fundamental Keyboard Navigation Conventions". The tab pattern is one of those roles.
You should be able to confirm your left/right arrow keys work by tabbing to your tab navigator with NVDA running then pressing INS+space. That will toggle the "browse mode" to "forms mode" and then your arrow keys should work.
When screen reader is in focus mode, how can we navigate to headings using keyboard shortcut? (pressing H in focus mode make an input as H in the form field). I tried using Inser+H but does not seems to work, Is using Insert+H is the right answer?
you need to change NVDA to browse mode to using NVDA keyboard shortcut (keyboard shortcut is not available in focus mode)
I tried ctrl- which was suggested somewhere online, but that makes the font smaller. (ctrl+ though does not undo that, so I had to restart LightTable to get back to normal).
Pressing ctrl enter I can manage to write and use "jump to definition", but obviously I will not be going through that every time....
If this should have helped, it is rather confusing what the period and comma here mean:
So do the built-in default keyboard shortcuts allow that, and how do they allow increasing font size?
Hit cmd/ctrl + enter
in the pane that this brought in: type "jump to" to see the command "jump to...", plus its keyboard shortcut. you can select the command from there but that would suck if it were the only way to invoke commands, so observer the keyboard binding you get there: (in the blue circles below)
notice that keys are separated by dashes in the display of the keyboard shortcut, so do not actually enter a dash because it is not part of the command and you will be doing crazy stuff if you assume otherwise
same thing for finding out how to zoom: enter "zoom" in that pane
unset you hair on fire
Courtesy of #rundis from the gitter channel...
I have a window, a label, a button, and an NSObject.
The first thing I want to do is change the NSObject's class to that of my custom controller.
The thing is, I can't seem to select it. Whatever object I select, the inspector panel says "No Selection". Why? I'm baffled.
accepted answer did not work for me, but answer by 'NSExplorer' did (In Xcode4, the new interface builder says "no selection"). i slightly modified answer from 'NSExplorer'
.. switch to another (non IB) file in the current tab
.. switch back to the IB file (eg. Main.storyboard)
the Attributes Inspector will magically show in the new tab.
I just had to close the assistant editor and the debug area and then it magically showed up. If you don't have the assistant editor open then all you need to do is open it, then close it again. That should fix it too.
If you don't know what the assistant editor is I have highlighted it in red:
Xcode 7.2
The interface builder in XCode 4 is incredibly buggy. I'm also having frequent issues like this. Have you tried closing XCode and re-opening your project? Sometimes, resizing the entire XCode window also seems to reset the interface builder layout.
Make sure you're selecting the objects from the XIB document panel (Where it says "Objects") on the left. Sometimes clicking the actual UI controls doesn't catch in the inspector panel, for whatever reason.
For me, I had the bottom, debugger stretched all away to the top. It said "no selection." By Taping on hide/open bottom debugger twice, you can get the main component back again.
If you have multiple windows, close the storyboard file and open it again, it worked for me
In the new Xcode 4 Documentation Organizer, I can't find the sidebar outline that lets you navigate through things such as class and instance methods, properties, etc for a given class. Where did it go?
What you can do in any document is left-click the rightmost item in the Jump Bar, i.e. the bar at the top. Move your mouse a little and the outline appears.
There is a keyboard shortcut to do this which you can customize: It's called Standard Editor > Show Document Items and defaults to CTRL-6.
This answer might be too late since the question is asked but hope someone can still get some benefit.
Here we go.
The "outline view" in xcode is actually called "Show Document Items" under menu "View -> Standard Editor"
and the keyboard shortcut is "Ctrl + 6" by default.
Another view you might be interested too is so called "Show Related Items" which also appears under menu "View -> Standard Editor" and it provides the option to see the callers and callees of any function you are viewing. Shortcut is "Ctrl + 1".
Personally, I find Ctrl + 6 is hard to press so I change the key bindings through menu "Xcode -> Preferences" and click "Key Bindings" tab. -- Everyone know this of cause :)
Have fun!!
I think that what pkananen refers to is the 'Navigator' sidebar, where you can see the 'eye', 'magnifier glass' and 'bookmarks' options in the jump bar.
If for any reason that sidebar is not showing, use "Editor > Show Navigator" option to bring it back to sight.