![]() Added this script to Zsh config to enable familiar text-editing shortcuts in the terminal."$\UF72B" = moveToEndOfLineAndModifySelection: // shift = moveToBeginningOfDocument: // ctrl = moveToEndOfDocument: // ctrl = moveToBeginningOfDocumentAndModifySelection: // ctrl shift = moveToEndOfDocumentAndModifySelection: // ctrl shift = moveWordLeft: // ctrl = moveWordRight: // ctrl = moveWordLeftAndModifySelection: // ctrl shift = moveWordRightAndModifySelection: // ctrl shift right "$\UF729" = moveToBeginningOfLineAndModifySelection: // shift home "\UF729" = moveToBeginningOfLine: // home #Pastebot for windows full#In case you’re wondering, here is a full list of possible commands, and here are the defaults. Edited ~/Library/KeyBindings/DefaultKeyBinding.Dict to consist of the snippet below.To enable Windows-style keyboard shortcuts, I did the following: SteerMouse gave me options to fix both issues. My main issues out of the box were that the mouse cursor was way too slow, and scrolling was unusable with the mouse wheel. MacOS is not friendly to mouse users (except for Apple’s Magic Mouse, but I shudder at the thought of using a mouse with only two buttons). And so, resigned to my fate, I proceeded to customize my Mac to suit my PC-tainted tastes. But by the time I started coding just a few years ago, WSL had come onto the scene, which I think is even more developer-friendly than MacOS because it’s real Linux.īut recently, as I started my first developer job, I got an obligatory MacBook Pro in the mail. Unpleasant and awful are words that come to many people’s minds when they fathom development on Windows. I’ve always been a PC user, and I remained one even after I got into software development. ![]()
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