![]() ![]() While not perfect yet, it more or less works. Someone might find my private.xml useful - This basically adds workarounds to sanely work with Maya, Houdini, Blender and in iTerm2. As I have a regular 'PC' keyboard (pretty standard Filco one, no fancy keys), I like using the control key as CMD. Get rid of resource fork Icons recursively: find. OSX supports this, too: #offĭefaults write CreateDesktop -bool false & killall Finderĭefaults write CreateDesktop -bool true & killall Finder I like how Gnome handles it: The Desktop does not display it's contents over the background image. I have the tendency to dump a lot of stuff (like screenshots of progress and other very shady things) on my Desktop. defaults write -g NSAutomaticWindowAnimationsEnabled -bool falseĭefaults write -g NSWindowResizeTime -float 0.001ĭefaults write -g QLPanelAnimationDuration -float 0ĭefaults write DisableAllAnimations -bool trueĭefaults write NSGlobalDomain NSWindowResizeTime. Sometimes, you just don't want to wait for a transition. Merge pdf "/System/Library/Automator/Combine PDF Pages.action/Contents/Resources/join.py" -o out.pdf *.pdfĬMD-ALT-i - Really, this should be the default. In fact, those lines in ~/.zshrc seem to work well: # Delete as delete ![]() In your ~/.inputrc: "\e[3~": delete-char or bindkey "\e[3~" delete-char. So, on iTerm and i guess even on Terminal, you could map an escape sequence to it (0x04 will do it), but that does not work in vi. All it does there is output a tilde (~) sign. Especially when your last command was wrong by a single typo or something. On a Mac, the delete key seems to have minor importance, but I just happen to use it in a terminal. Delete previous word (in shell) Ctrl + W: Its faster to delete by words. ![]()
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