Home
My First Mac



 Help Buying and Getting
 Started with Your New Mac

Mastering Keyboard Shortcuts

Quick Scan

Notice the short cut hints on menus.

Learn the Necessary 9 short cuts first.

Enable Keyboard Navigation to use keys for even more uses.

Use Quicksilver for super effciency.

Mastering Keyboard Shortcuts on the Mac

Simply put, keyboard shortcuts are the most efficient way to use your Mac or any other computer. The great thing is that when you use keyboard shortcuts, after a while they will become as reflexive as driving a car. You will start using them subconsciously, so when you think, "I should save my work," your fingers have already done it by pressing cmd-S.

If you are new to using a Mac, by all means use the mouse to explore the menus and their contents. It really is the best way to learn the system. But once you feel ready for the next level, start by noticing the symbols on the right side side of the menus. These are the keyboard shortcuts that correspond to the menu commands you have been using.

Menu with short cuts highlighted

See the illustration below for the keys that correspond to specific symbols. The sequence of symbols in a shortcut means that these keys can be pressed at the same time to get the menu action you desire.

 

Mac keyboard keys and symbols chart

There are a few different categories of keyboard shortcuts as grouped on the master list at Apple.com: Startup, Finder Window, Menu Commands, Universal Access, Mouse Keys, and Other. I suggest you start with the Menu Commands and Other shortcuts. The others can wait until you need them. The following are my suggestions for the Necessary 9, the ones to master first.

Cmd-S (Save). Number one by a long shot. Make this instinctual. Hopefully using cmd-S regularly and often will prevent you from losing your work when something else goes wrong. The rest of the Necessary 9 are cmd-O (Open), cmd-W (Close), cmd-Q (Quit), cmd-P (Print), cmd-X (Cut), cmd-C (Copy), and cmd-V (Paste). Lastly, in the Finder, use cmd-delete to move the selected file to the trash. That one saves a lot of mousing around.

One of the great things about shortcuts on the Mac versus Windows is that the main modifier key is the Command (cmd), or Apple key. It's the one right next to the space bar with the Apple logo and cloverleaf symbol. The reason this is so much better than using the Control key as the main key is because it is more natural to hit it with your thumb and pivot your whole hand around to hit another key. This way you can hit most keyboard shortcuts one-handed and keep the other on the mouse.

In contrast, using the pinkie finger is more natural to hit Control key. The position of the Control key makes it difficult to hit even half the keys with one hand. Additionally, if your coordination is anything like mine, my pinkie finger is much more difficult to use to hit a key than my thumb.

Windows to Mac conversion. If you know and use keyboard shortcuts regularly in Windows, you will need to retrain your fingers to some extent. It's going to suck at first, but you will eventually get it and hopefully realize how much easier it is to hit the Command key.

The place to start is just remembering to use the Command (cmd) key when you would use the Control (ctrl) key with the other keys in Windows. Here is where you should be thankful Bill G ripped off the Mac OS so blatantly in the 90's. Most of your favorites should work the way you expect by just making this switch. Ctrl-O, ctrl-W, ctrl-P, etc. For the ones that don't, remember to look at the right side of the menus for your clue. And don't forget you can switch programs by using cmd-Tab. That one should make you feel more at home.

Gimme Some More. OK, you've already mastered the list of shortcuts. If you want to expand what the keyboard can do for you, it's time to explore the Keyboard Shortcuts pane in the Keyboard & Mouse Preferences. This where you can add Keyboard Navigation, so you can select icons in the Dock, buttons in the Finder window toolbar, or tab between text boxes using the keyboard. You can also change the existing shortcuts and add new ones for specific applications.

Reaching the Mountaintop - Quicksilver.
Quicksilver is a program that allows you to use a key sequence for many actions you use your Mac to do. From Hack Attack: A beginner's guide to Quicksilver:

"Quicksilver can be used to launch files and applications, manipulate data, and seamlessly plug into almost any application on your Mac so that you can perform actions as soon as you think of them in a few short keystrokes"


There is a growing community of Quicksilver users and no shortage tips and information about it on the Internet. See the links below for more.

I hope this article has outlined a progression for incorporating keyboard shortcuts into working and playing with your new Mac. You can start with the Necessary Nine and keep adding until you become a keyboard ninja.

Have I missed anything? What shortcuts can you not live without? Have you discovered any that just change the way you do things? Let us know in the Comment Section below!


DIG DEEPER

Keyboard Basics from the AARP
Apple's Comprehensive List of Shortcuts 
The Origin of the Cloverleaf Symbol
The OS X Keyboard Cheat Sheet (PDF)

On Quicksilver
Quicksilver Site 
Lifehacker's Hack Attack: A beginner's guide to Quicksilver 
Quicksilver Info at 43 Folders 

 
 

This button is an easy way to let readers bookmark articles on Digg, Del.icio.us, Stumbleupon, Google Bookmarks and other services with a single click. You can find out more about Social Bookmarking here.

CLOSE

 
 
 
 
 
 

CLOSE     

 
 







Your Comments:

Here are my favorite keyboard shortcuts: cmd-[  and  cmd-]
Those let me go "back" and "forward", respectively, in a web browser.


 Jean
 06/10/2007  at  05:34 PM

Jean, I didn't know that one! I usually use cmd-right or left arrow, but yours are easier.


 Chris K
 06/10/2007  at  05:36 PM

While you are in the application switcher (cmd-Tab) click the Q key to quit the highlighted program.


 pirco
 06/11/2007  at  09:29 PM

I bought a mac mini to try it out and I have to use the keyboard a lot since I put it in my living room.

I haven't been able to figure out how to move files with just the keyboard. I can COPY files with just the keyboard, but I can't move them. On Windows I just highlight the files that I want to move, cut them with Ctrl+X and then paste them with Ctrl+V. If I never paste files that I cut then the files are never moved...

How do you do this with the Mac OS?


 Wayne B
 06/16/2007  at  07:22 PM

Wayne, use Quicksilver. I have a trigger set up so that if I have a file highlighted, I then type ctrl-esc to bring it up in quicksilver. In the action pane you can select move, copy, or even just delete. The differences between the three should be pretty self explanatory.


 Chris N
 06/26/2007  at  09:38 AM

Using the actual Mac Mighty Mouse lets many of these features without even touching the keyboard. I highly recommend the mac mouse.


 Lysa
 06/28/2007  at  07:54 AM

Mac users make a big assumption that everyone can determine the control and option key from their symbols. I for one see no logical correlation for the symbol and the keys. I never understand why Mac refuses to add these symbols to thier keyboard but they include them in every menu with no clarification.

An otherwise happy Mac user.


 Jeff Franzen
 07/14/2007  at  04:35 PM

Can I not use a standard PC keyboard and mouse, continue/modify and use my 5 button mouse(CAD).


 Noig
 07/16/2007  at  11:24 AM

I miss the <windows_key>+E shortcut a lot.

As for the keyboard symbols, it's not immediately obvious, but the alt/option symbol looks almost like a switch symbol in an electrical circuit diagram. The Escape looks like an arrow escaping from a circle. The only problem is that my MacBook keyboard doesn't have a symbol on the Escape key, it only says esc. Neither does my alt key say option. Took me a while to figure out that it was the option key.


 John Ferguson
 07/20/2007  at  05:14 PM

For Jeff: I have a MS Natural ergonomic keyboard and a MS optical mouse. It takes a bit of getting familiar with what keys on the MS keyboard map to the Apple keyboard, but it is possible. The Windows key is the Command key ... for example. I wish Apple would make a decent ergonomic keyboard. It would make things so much nicer.


 Lori
 07/28/2007  at  08:58 PM

Page 1 of 3 pages  1 2 3 >

Your response:

Name: Email:

Notify me of follow-up comments

Enter the word you see below:


Remember my personal information

Please keep your comments related to the topic. Personal attacks, offensive language or comments containing advertising will be deleted and you may be banned from MFM.