Have you ever wondered if your keyboard shortcuts are set up optimally? Well, I did, so I decided to visualize it with a heat-map.

It proved to me that I rely on my left pinky too much, so I’ll try to rework my shortcuts.

You can check out the project here, currently it only works on Linux.

  • @Etterra@lemmy.world
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    74 months ago

    Looks like somebody relies on caps locked a little too heavily. Or as you might say, STOP FUCKING SHOUTING ALL THE TIME!

  • @stupidcasey@lemmy.world
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    44 months ago

    I don’t know what this is at all, every one knows ctrl and alt is where it’s at and enter/ caps lock? Are you just trying to piss people off?

    • @andnekon@programming.devOP
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      24 months ago

      I’m using a tiling window manager and neovim as my main editor, so I have to use hot-keys quite a lot As for the caps, I have it remapped to control

      • @underscores@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        1 month ago

        Meta, Hyper, and Super were all originally different keys. See this lisp machine keyboard from in the 70s that had 7 modifiers, including all of those. Most of the time Hyper or Super are mapped to the Windows key. With Meta it varies more from program to program. A lot of desktop software maps it to the Windows key. In Emacs its usually mapped as Alt or the Esc key.

        • @andnekon@programming.devOP
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          34 months ago

          Thank you for clarification!

          I don’t really understand how can specific programs map the Meta key as something. Isn’t it the job of the driver to map key-presses to input events (which are then passed to display server by evdev)?

          • @underscores@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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            1 month ago

            I’m not sure if it’s directly mapping the input. I think it’s getting the other keys input and binding it to the same commands. Also, Emacs was around even before the X windowing system, so they probably came up with the mappings before a lot of these common defaults came about.