![]() ![]() This is a screenshot from the Keyboard Maestro Editor: It shows how you can make items appear out of alphabetical order (with the numbers at the beginning) and how you can add a character at the beginning, to make it the hotkey that appears in my iTunes Palette. Here’s an example (just for illustration, it’s not particularly useful). This way, your hands never have to leave the keyboard.įor bonus points, you can use fixate the order of the items on a palette by starting a line with a number followed by closed parentheses, like this: 01)Primary macro (which then appears as “Primary Macro”.) This generates a Conflict Palette, which means that you can type the highlighted characters to launch a specific action or palette. Instead, assign the hotkey that you would use for the Global Macro Palette (in MacSparky’s case, F20 for me it’s hyperkey-A = “⇧⌘⌥⌃A”) to all of the items (including palettes) that you want to include in your globally available Über-palette of macros. You can follow that link for more on this (with some terrific videos that happen to be in German), but the upshot seems to be this… (***Feature request?***) Someone on the Keyboard Maestro forum had the same question: How do I get Group Palette key response behavior to imitate Conflict Palette?. Still, it’s frustrating to have to use the mouse to select items on the Global Macro Palette. ![]() I’ve been using Keyboard Maestro for years, and I’d never figured out half this stuff. MacSparky really nailed it with this new video field guide. ![]()
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