![]() ![]() So it seems they're only "stuck" in CS, not at the OS level or in all the other apps I've been testing. If you open OS X's keyboard app, Control Command Shift and Option don't show as down. Every non-CS app I've tested worked normally while the bug was triggered in CS. Lightroom doesn't seem to suffer the bug, but it is not part of CS. Once triggered, CS apps (Illustrator, Photoshop, InDesign…) act as if Control, Command and Option are always down. ![]() No idea if it has anything to do with the problem though, just writing it down in case it helps. The main difference between the quick entries is that the "quick entry with autofill" uses OS X Services to get any selected text in the frontmost app and some other informations, as described in Cultured Code's wiki: Still it's good to have this fix when we're in the middle of some work, instead of having to log out. ![]() Using the "fix-upper" worked, until I used quick entry with autofill in Things again. Oh and I noticed this issue way before 10.6.5 too. It's not the only way to trigger it on my Mac: I never used this combo before I read this topic (I actually had to change it's keyboard shortcut to use it because of a keyboard shortcut collision with another app, so I'm 100% sure I didn't use it by mistake.) I normally only use the standard quick entry that doesn't trigger the bug. The normal quick entry never triggers the bug. There are also related apps which don’t really overlap in functionality, but target similar needs: Swish, Hookshot, Magnet, Spectacle, Rectangle, yabai, LayAuto, OptimalLayout, BetterTouchTool, BetterSnapTool, Moom, uBar.I can also reliably reproduce the bug with Things, as described above: as soon as I use the "quick entry with autofill" combo. Only shows apps, not windows (note: can press down to see window of selected app)Ĭycles through tabs and windows, but only of the same app. Also, the almost-good-enough apps are not open-source. However, none was completely satisfactory so I rolled my own. All images are compressed, AltTab is optimized to be as light as possible on the user resources.Ĭhange the shortcut keys, switch to a Windows theme and more, using the Preferences window:īefore building my own app, I looked around at similar apps. AltTab tries to use as few resources as it can: CPU, memory, disk, etc.It may ask the user to send a crash report after a crash for example, but it will never spy on the user. AltTab doesn’t send or receive any data without explicit user consent.Apple Silicon: yes, AltTab is universalĪltTab is available in: Bahasa Indonesia, Català, Dansk, Deutsch, Eesti keel, English, Español, Français, Galego, Italiano, Kurdî, Lëtzebuergesch, Limba română, Magyar, Nederlands, Norsk, Polski, Português, Português (Brasil), Shqip, Slovenčina, Slovenščina, Suomi, Svenska, Tiếng Việt, Türkçe, Čeština, Ελληνικά, Български, Русский язык, Српски / Srpski, українська мова, עִבְרִית ,العربية ,فارسی, हिन्दी, বাংলা, 日本語, 简体中文, 繁體中文, 한국어Ĭontribute your own language easily! Privacy and respecting the user.Accessibility: VoiceOver, sticky keys, reduced transparency, etcĪlternatively, you can use homebrew: Homebrew 2.7 and above.Drag-and-drop things on top of window thumbnails.Blacklist apps you don’t want to list or trigger AltTab from.Custom trigger shortcuts with almost any key.show app badges, Space numbers, increase icon, thumbnail, title size, etc) AltTab brings the power of Windows’s “alt-tab” window switcher to macOS.
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