![]() Keyboard Maestro III: Situational Triggers.Keyboard Maestro II: Launching Apps Intelligently. ![]() Īlthough you will be able to follow along without doing so, it will also help your understanding if you’ve checked out my previous series on Keyboard Maestro: Working With Text in Keyboard Maestro: Part 1.Using Palettes to Improve Keyboard Shortcuts in Keyboard Maestro.Using Keyboard Maestro to Create Custom Keyboard Shortcuts.You’ll also need to have read the three previous tutorials in this series: It costs $36 for a license and there’s a 30-day free trial. You can grab one from the developers website. ![]() To follow this tutorial you’ll obviously need a copy of Keyboard Maestro. There will be a few edge cases where it makes a mistake, but with the techniques I show you, you’ll be able to fix them in your own version of the macro. What I’ll do is show you how to build a macro that takes a block of text written with British English spellings and convert it to American English spellings. In this tutorial I'll take things even further when it comes to working with text. In the previous three tutorials in this series I’ve looked at how to create keyboard shortcuts, how to use one shortcut for different macros and the basics of working with text. I can barely write a Hello World program in JavaScript, but I’ve automated huge parts of my workflow using Keyboard Maestro. Even if you can’t code, you can use it to create macros that automate the things you do. Keyboard Maestro is one of the most powerful Mac apps available.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |