F [HOT] Download Shortcut

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Haldis Momeni

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Jan 20, 2024, 1:46:58 PM1/20/24
to fehebiba

Like others, I need to change the keyboard shortcut to open 1Password to something that does not conflict with the Google Docs keyboard shortcut for strikethrough (Command + Shift + X). I have tried changing the the keyboard shortcut in the settings for 1Password, but that had no effect. I am using Chrome on a Mac. Thanks for your help.

Hey @sarahhooverboyd, I can confirm that the shortcut command+shift+x to open in 1Password the browser conflicts with the strikethrough shortcut in Google Docs. I am very sorry for the trouble. I will report your instance of the issue to our developers so that they are aware of how it is impacting your experience. Hopefully they will be able to come up with a good solution in the future.

f download shortcut


Download 🌟 https://t.co/aIptv34eY5



If the shortcut to open the extension is already set to command+shift+x, please change it to another shortcut. After that, close out of the window and go through steps 1-4 again. Make sure to change the shortcut back to command+shift+x.

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When enclosing a text for Cloze using the keyboard shortcut, another card is added next to the cloze also, as shown here. This happens without double-tapping the c. I thought this is a new feature initially though apparently it is not.

I haven't really looked at the plugins code yet, so I don't know, if the shortcuts you mentioned can be done via a plugin or if they have to be added to the core code. After the refactoring I lost track of the code a bit.
Some of the things I would go to in the code don't exist anymore or had been transformed into a few levels of abstraction. I guess it will take me a while to familiarize myself with the code again.

@tessus would you suggest creating another thread for "Add shortcut to copy Markdown link of a note" - or adding this shortcut is related to the more general question of this thread: How to create [your] own shortcuts?

I would really like to use a shortcut to create a checkbox, as - [ ] is tedious to type (or to move the mouse to the menu). And it would be even more fantastic if another shortcut would mark the checkbox complete (and add a datetime at the end of the line!) - I am using an extension in VS Code that does all these things, and would find it so convenient if it was in Joplin also.

It's more of a work-a-round as there isn't an option in the keyboard shortcut preferences to assign a shortcut key to toggle layer visibility on/off at the moment. If some of your layers have opacities that aren't 100%, then obviously this work-a-round won't help and you'll need to resort back to using the check boxes in those cases.

The devs are so close now. They have a 'Hide layer' shortcut, and separately a 'Show layer' shortcut setting, but why are they not the same shortcut as a toggle? It should be the same shortcut setting - so you press it and it toggles the state between hide and show. That's how it is in PS and its far better that way. Reduces the amount of shortcuts you need to remember, and is easier to toggle quickly.

If the Menu doesn't show a shortcut, then probably one isn't assigned by default. You should then be able to assign your own through the application's Settings (or Preferences), Shortcuts. Specify the Persona at the top of the dialog, then the Menu, then scroll down to set a shortcut.

You can make shortcuts using various methods, none of which have anything to do with Dropbox. The simplest is to just hold CTRL and SHIFT while dragging a file to your Desktop. You can also right-click the file and select Copy, then right-click any empty space on your Desktop and select Paste Shortcut.

As I said in the message, I already tried copying and pasting the file to the desktop. But making a copy of the file does not allow me to edit the file from the desktop; When I open the copy on my desktop, I can edit it any way I like, but when I save the changes, the changes are not reflected in the original file, because it is only a copy, not the actual file in the Dropbox. A copy of a file is not the same as a shortcut. The reason I use shortcuts for my desktop is so I can edit my files without opening Dropbox, and have the updated files be available to me when I'm away from home. Do you know what I mean?

I am used to working in excel and using keyboard shortcuts to navigate my sheets without having to use a mouse. Is there a keyboard shortcut to delete a row? if not can how do I let the product team know to add this to the development queue?

While there are keyboard shortcuts available for inserting rows and navigating to existing rows in a sheet, there isn't currently a shortcut available for deleting rows. Click here for the full list of keyboard shortcuts that can be used in Smartsheet and feel free to Submit a Product Enhancement Request for having a shortcut to delete rows considered as a possibility for future development.

They already added Keyboard customization to Brave Nightly and they keep expanding the available commands for it. So there is no reason to wait for a shortcut to be implemented, as long as Brave releases the command, it will be accessed through the Commander or as a keyboard shortcut.

Shortcuts in Microsoft OneLake allow you to unify your data across domains, clouds, and accounts by creating a single virtual data lake for your entire enterprise. All Fabric experiences and analytical engines can directly connect to your existing data sources such as Azure, Amazon Web Services (AWS), and OneLake through a unified namespace. OneLake manages all permissions and credentials, so you don't need to separately configure each Fabric experience to connect to each data source. Additionally, you can use shortcuts to eliminate edge copies of data and reduce process latency associated with data copies and staging.

Shortcuts are objects in OneLake that point to other storage locations. The location can be internal or external to OneLake. The location that a shortcut points to is known as the target path of the shortcut. The location where the shortcut appears is known as the shortcut path. Shortcuts appear as folders in OneLake and any experience or service that has access to OneLake can use them. Shortcuts behave like symbolic links. They're an independent object from the target. If you delete a shortcut, the target remains unaffected. If you move, rename, or delete a target path, the shortcut can break.

You can create shortcuts in lakehouses and Kusto Query Language (KQL) databases. Furthermore, the shortcuts you create within these items can point to other OneLake locations, Azure Data Lake Storage (ADLS) Gen2, Amazon S3 storage accounts, or Dataverse.

When creating shortcuts in a lakehouse, you must understand the folder structure of the item. Lakehouses are composed of two top level folders: the Tables folder and the Files folder. The Tables folder represents the managed portion of the lakehouse, while the Files folder is the unmanaged portion of the lakehouse.In the Tables folder, you can only create shortcuts at the top level. Shortcuts aren't supported in other subdirectories of the Tables folder. If the target of the shortcut contains data in the Delta\Parquet format, the lakehouse automatically synchronizes the metadata and recognizes the folder as a table.In the Files folder, there are no restrictions on where you can create shortcuts. You can create them at any level of the folder hierarchy. Table discovery doesn't happen in the Files folder.

When you create a shortcut in a KQL database, it appears in the Shortcuts folder of the database. The KQL database treats shortcuts like external tables. To query the shortcut, use the external_table function of the Kusto Query Language.

Any Fabric or non-Fabric service that can access data in OneLake can use shortcuts. Shortcuts are transparent to any service accessing data through the OneLake API. Shortcuts just appear as another folder in the lake. Spark, SQL, Real-Time Analytics, and Analysis Services can all use shortcuts when querying data.

Spark notebooks and Spark jobs can use shortcuts that you create in OneLake. Relative file paths can be used to directly read data from shortcuts. Additionally, if you create a shortcut in the Tables section of the lakehouse and it is in the Delta format, you can read it as a managed table using Spark SQL syntax.

You can also read shortcuts in the Tables section of a lakehouse through the SQL analytics endpoint for the lakehouse. You can access the SQL analytics endpoint through the mode selector of the lakehouse or through SQL Server Management Studio (SSMS).

You can create semantic models for lakehouses containing shortcuts in the Tables section of the lakehouse. When the semantic model runs in Direct Lake mode, Analysis Services can read data directly from the shortcut.

Applications and services outside of Fabric can also access shortcuts through the OneLake API. OneLake supports a subset of the ADLS Gen2 and Blob storage APIs. To learn more about the OneLake API, see OneLake access with APIs.

Internal OneLake shortcuts allow you to reference data within existing Fabric items. These items include lakehouses, KQL databases and data warehouses. The shortcut can point to a folder location within the same item, across items within the same workspace or even across items in different workspaces. When you create a shortcut across items, the item types don't need to match. For instance, you can create a shortcut in a lakehouse that points to data in a data warehouse.

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