![]() You can also rotate the different windows if you keep pressing the same key. I almost don’t need to move my mouse to the task bar, look for the appliaction I want(What’s worse, I may even forget which app I am looking for at this stage), click on it, move the mouse to the place I’m interested in. This has dramatically speeded up my daily workflow in Windows and helps a lot when I need to switch between different applications(Emacs, browser, IntelliJ, IM, mail client, Windows Explorer, etc.). ![]() So you can maybe press F1 and switch to Emacs, press F2 and switch to the browser and so on. AutoHotKey supports switching to a specific application or a group, while Karabiner doesn’t.įollowing Xah Lee’s suggestion, it’s very handy to bind a key to an application. What’s more, in Windows, when I am using the application that runs in “Administrator Mode”, the remapping fails again.Ĭombined with the Truly Ergonormic Keyboard I use, it’s a better experience in Mac than in Windows, as I don’t need to worry my remapping doesn’t work. In Mac, the remapping can also take effect in the login window. Karabiner has better system-wide support while AutoHotKey doesn’t. Here’s some difference I have found between them, some of them I think are because of the differences of the underlying operating system. I’ve been using Karabiner (formerly known as KeyRemap4MacBook) on Mac and AutoHotKey on Windows for sometime.īoth are popular key remapping tools in the correpondent platform.
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