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{"description": "I just said what I said and it was wrong. Or was taken wrong.", "feed_url": "http://leancrew.com/all-this/feed.json", "title": "And now its all this", "items": [{"title": "Last thoughts on modifier keys", "url": "http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/last-thoughts-on-modifier-keys/", "author": {"name": "Dr. Drang"}, "summary": "The first shall be last.", "date_published": "2017-11-23T21:08:29+00:00", "id": "http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/last-thoughts-on-modifier-keys/", "content_html": "<p>When I wrote the post about <a href=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/modifier-key-order/\">ordering Mac modifier keys</a> a few days ago, I was thinking primarily about the proper order of the <em>symbols</em> when writing about a keyboard shortcut, like ⌃⌥⌘P.<sup id=\"fnref:preview\"><a href=\"#fn:preview\" rel=\"footnote\">1</a></sup>. I mentioned parenthetically that this order isnt always observed when people speak about keyboard shortcuts or when they write the names of the keys out fully, as in “Command-Shift-3 takes a screenshot.”</p>\n<p>Jason Snell, in both <a href=\"https://sixcolors.com/link/2017/11/the-order-of-modifier-keys-on-the-mac/\">a post at Six Colors</a> and in conversation with John Siracusa on <a href=\"https://www.relay.fm/upgrade/168\">the lastest episode of Upgrade</a>, took a stand against Apples ordering:<sup id=\"fnref:hig\"><a href=\"#fn:hig\" rel=\"footnote\">2</a></sup></p>\n<blockquote>\n<p>Command is the commander! Command is the monarch of all keys! Command always comes first, in my book.</p>\n</blockquote>\n<p>Siracusa agreed, and so do I. The ⌘ key is, and has always been, the key that signals a keyboard shortcut. While other modifier keys are sometimes used without ⌘—in cursor control and text selection, for example—I cant think of any Apple applications that dont use ⌘ to signal a keyboard shortcut for a menu item. And that primacy in shortcuts to menu items is, I think, why Apple puts it last rather than first.</p>\n<p>Keyboard shortcuts are always presented right-justified along the right edge of the menu. The most common shortcuts are just ⌘ and a letter, like ⌘N to start a new document, for example. Its typically the variations on the basic command that get additional modifier keys, like ⌥⌘N to start a new project. If that were presented in a menu as ⌘⌥N, the menu would look wrong because the ⌘ symbols wouldnt line up.</p>\n<p>Heres the <span class=\"menu\">File</span> menu in Safari:</p>\n<p><img alt=\"Safari File menu\" class=\"ss\" src=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/images2017/20171123-Safari%20File%20menu.png\" title=\"Safari File menu\"/></p>\n<p>There are two different <span class=\"menu\">New</span> commands and three different <span class=\"menu\">Close</span> commands. This, in Apples opinion (and mine), wouldnt be right:</p>\n<p><img alt=\"Altered Safari File menu\" class=\"ss\" src=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/images2017/20171123-Altered%20Safari%20File%20menu.png\" title=\"Altered Safari File menu\"/></p>\n<p>Its not just having the ⌘ symbols aligned. The additional modifier symbols go in front <em>because</em> ⌘ is king and must sit next to the N or the W. The importance of the modifier decreases as you move away from the letter.</p>\n<p>It should go without saying—but Ill say it anyway—that the letter (or number or whatever) key is the most important because <em>nothing</em> happens until its pressed.</p>\n<p>Having said all this, and despite agreeing with Apples symbol ordering, my ear for shortcut ordering works just like Jasons and Johns. The main reason I use keyboard shortcut symbols in my posts instead of words is that I can read ⌥⇧⌘W and not be bothered because I dont “hear” it as I read the symbols. “Option-Shift-Command-W,” on the other hand, gets sounded out in my head, and it sounds wrong.</p>\n<p>I suspect thats why Apples own documentation sometimes gets the order wrong when the modifiers get written out as words. In speaking out the keys, “Command” is natural to put first because it announces that whats coming is a keyboard shortcut.</p>\n<div class=\"footnotes\">\n<hr/>\n<ol>\n<li id=\"fn:preview\">\n<p>Which happens to be the shortcut I use for previewing a blog post locally before publishing it. <a href=\"#fnref:preview\" rev=\"footnote\">↩︎</a></p>\n</li>\n<li id=\"fn:hig\">\n<p>In the original post, I said I didnt know where the order was documented. A few people pointed me to both the <a href=\"https://developer.apple.com/macos/human-interface-guidelines/user-interaction/keyboard/\">Human Interface Guidelines</a> and the <a href=\"https://itunes.apple.com/us/book/apple-style-guide/id1161855204?mt=11\">Style Guide</a>, where Apple gives the proper order explicitly. <a href=\"#fnref:hig\" rev=\"footnote\">↩︎</a></p>\n</li>\n</ol>\n</div><br />\n<p>[If the formatting looks odd in your feed reader, <a href=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/last-thoughts-on-modifier-keys/\">visit the original article</a>]</p>"}, {"title": "My next Mac", "url": "http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/my-next-mac/", "author": {"name": "Dr. Drang"}, "summary": "Apple isn't making it easy to choose a Mac and hasn't for a few years.", "date_published": "2017-11-22T22:04:57+00:00", "id": "http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/my-next-mac/", "content_html": "<p>Will probably be an iMac. I guess that spoils the suspense, doesnt it?</p>\n<p>My iMac at work is the <a href=\"https://support.apple.com/kb/sp667?locale=en_US\">27″ Late 2012 model</a>, the one that came out one step before Retina came to the iMac. I dont regret buying it, as my previous iMac (a <a href=\"https://everymac.com/systems/apple/imac/specs/imac-core-2-duo-2.16-24-inch-specs.html\">2006 model</a>, I think) was absolutely on its last legs—constantly swapping to hard disk and running hot. I hadnt meant to wait so long to replace it, but there was <a href=\"https://buyersguide.macrumors.com/\">a long delay</a> before that 2012 model came out, and I didnt want to buy something that would be last years model almost as soon as I set it up.</p>\n<p>My home Mac is the venerable 2010 13″ MacBook Air, the first good Air. In the normal course of things, this would be the Mac I replace next, and Ive been expecting to do so for a few years now. but…</p>\n<p>But Apple never came out with a Retina MacBook Air, choosing instead to go with the MacBook, which I find a little too far on the portable side of the portability/power spectrum. A couple of years ago, I had a crisis when <a href=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/2015/06/beep-beep-beep/\">my Air crapped out on me</a>. It seemed wrong to put money into a five-year-old machine, but I wasnt enthused about any of the MacBooks in the lineup at the time. I didnt know the just-released 2015 MacBook Pro would turn out to be the <a href=\"https://marco.org/2017/11/14/best-laptop-ever\">best laptop ever made</a>, I didnt want to spend MacBook Pro money on my home/travel machine.</p>\n<p>The $280 logic board upgrade turned out to be a good investment, as Im now 2½ years into my rejuvenated Air. Yes, it takes a while to wake up when I open the lid. Yes, its 128 GB SSD is tiny. No, it cant take advantage of many of the iOS integration features that newer Macs can. And no, I dont think its a good idea to install High Sierra on it. But its given me 30 months of faithful use, much more than I expected at the time.</p>\n<p>The announcement of the Touch Bar last year made me certain Id be getting a MacBook Pro with it. A software-configurable set of controls seemed perfect for someone whos always ginning up little scripts. But no one seems to like it, possibly because its configurability isnt especially open to users. Bummer.</p>\n<p>Ive delayed the decision on my home Mac for such a long time that now my office Mac is long in the tooth, too. Still working fine for most tasks, but just a Core 2 Duo machine that often <a href=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/2015/10/dealing-with-a-recalcitrant-pdf/\">makes me wait</a> to scroll through long PDFs of scanned engineering and architectural drawings, something I need to do at work quite often. And no Retina.</p>\n<p>So it looks like my best bet is to buy a new iMac for work and bring my current office iMac home. This will put the power where I need it the most and will give me extra ooomph here at home. Especially with disk space (3 TB vs. 128 GB) and RAM (24GB vs. 4GB).</p>\n<p>It will be weird, though, as I havent had a desktop computer here at home in a dozen years. Will I enjoy being tethered to one spot in the house? And what about a travel computer?</p>\n<p>Both of these questions are made less pressing by the device Im typing this on: a 9.7″ iPad Pro. While I agree with <a href=\"http://www.macdrifter.com/2017/11/the-mac-still-feels-like-home.html\">Gabe</a> that it is by no means a Mac substitute, it can handle a lot of what I do at home and virtually everything I need to do on the road.<sup id=\"fnref:gabe\"><a href=\"#fn:gabe\" rel=\"footnote\">1</a></sup></p>\n<p>As for which iMac, I think Ill settle on a middle-of-the-road 27″ configuration with a 3TB Fusion drive. Sort of the 2017 of what I bought in 2012.</p>\n<div class=\"footnotes\">\n<hr/>\n<ol>\n<li id=\"fn:gabe\">\n<p>I bought the iPad Pro last year as a sort of experiment to find out how comfortable Id be working on it. I intend to write a full post about the results of that experiment soon, but in the meantime, you really should read <a href=\"http://www.macdrifter.com/2017/11/the-mac-still-feels-like-home.html\">Gabes post over at Macdrifter</a>. Ill probably use his post as a jumping-off point. And there may be a quiz. <a href=\"#fnref:gabe\" rev=\"footnote\">↩︎</a></p>\n</li>\n</ol>\n</div><br />\n<p>[If the formatting looks odd in your feed reader, <a href=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/my-next-mac/\">visit the original article</a>]</p>"}, {"title": "Modifier key order", "url": "http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/modifier-key-order/", "author": {"name": "Dr. Drang"}, "summary": "Writing about Mac keyboard shortcuts? Make sure you put them in canonical order.", "date_published": "2017-11-20T02:22:59+00:00", "id": "http://leancrew.com/all-this/2017/11/modifier-key-order/", "content_html": "<p>If you write about Mac keyboard shortcuts, as I did yesterday, you should know how to do it right. Just as theres a <a href=\"https://dictionary.cambridge.org/grammar/british-grammar/adjectives-order\">proper order for adjectives</a> in English, theres a proper order for listing the modifier keys in a shortcut.</p>\n<p>I havent found any documentation for this, but Apples preferred order is clear in how they show the modifiers in menus and how theyre displayed in the Keyboard Shortcuts Setting.</p>\n<p><img alt=\"Canonical Mac modifier key order\" class=\"ss\" src=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/images2017/20171119-Canonical%20Mac%20modifier%20key%20order.png\" title=\"Canonical Mac modifier key order\"/></p>\n<p>The order is similar to how you see them down at the bottom left of your keyboard.</p>\n<p><img alt=\"Modifier keys\" class=\"ss\" src=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/images2017/20171119-Modifier%20keys.jpg\" title=\"Modifier keys\"/></p>\n<p>Control (⌃), Option (⌥), and Command (⌘) always go in that order. The oddball is the Shift(⇧) key, which sneaks in just in front of Command.</p>\n<p>Keyboard Maestro recognizes this standard order and presents its “hot key” shortcut the same way.</p>\n<p><img alt=\"Keyboard Maestro hot key field\" class=\"ss\" src=\"http://leancrew.com/all-this/images2017/20171119-Keyboard%20Maestro%20hot%20key%20field.png\" title=\"Keyboard Maestro hot key field\"/></p>\n<p>(When people speak about keyboard shortcuts, its not uncommon to put Command first, e.g., “Command-Shift-3 takes a screenshot.” Ive seen it written out that way, too. Apple is usually pretty careful to use the same order when using words as when using symbols. <a href=\"https://support.apple.com/en-us/HT201361\">This page</a>, for example, uses Shift-Command-3, to match the 3 youd see in the Keyboard Shortcut Setti