BTW, I should make it clear that dactyl doesn't always detect all clickable items. So I have to resort to the mouse when I need to click them. But for the most part, it does.
So it should work, as long as it can find a white pixel in Firefox's address bar (for which you will probably need to change coordinates), and as long as Autohotkey can detect the title of your active page.
For example, the script only searches for the white pixel / address bar when needed, to save time when it isn't needed.
Oh, and one more thing: Home and End are a little more difficult to get right, because the page doesn't know where your cursor is after you click on the address bar.
I have tried to work around it, as you can see in the script. But it is far from perfect. You may want to remove those keys if unexpected clicks happen.
Right, sure. I'll come back to this conversation to read again what you said, since it might take some time for me to get around to testing it, since I've some other things to do (related to driver updates among others).
Some tweaking is always necessary if you want to do something with Autohotkey that actually depends on what the GUI on an entirely different system looks like, as in colours and positions.
I primarily looked for keyboard-accessible alternatives because of how slow I found using the trackpad. After adding such alternatives, I most of the time didn't need to use the trackpad, and after that I assumed that if I go back to using the mouse it'd be as useless and annoying as the trackpad. But I do admit the mouse is definitely useful.
Some people always use the mouse for X, the keyboard for Y. But it is really nice to be able to use the keyboard for 90% of things, and the mouse also for 90% of things. Then you can always choose.
Except when you're doing one 10% or the other.
The only thing is that you need to memorise certain hotkeys or gestures...
I suppose. The problem is that how many times you need to switch between them for small tasks. Dactyl helps me to considerably lessen them and make the durations of using one input device at a time longer.
In itself, both tools are great, it's the switching and its frequency that matters.
But I would still imagine myself using the keyboard more if I use a computer with a mouse. I will still stand by with the assertion that the keyboard has more potential to be efficient than the mouse.
But otherwise, the mouse is very fast and much more so with gestures.
I will agree.
@Cerberus BTW, I remember reading a comment of someone with the name of Cerberus TM (with TM as superscript) on a review/comparison page about applications like Launchy, Executor, FARR, etc. I suspect it was you.
I got reminded of this because FARR is a program hosted at donation coder.
@Alraxite Well, the standard way in that program is by long-click menus: all of those things he does with red gestures are normally done by accessing right-click menus.
@Alraxite It also works if you don't have any Explorer windows open!
So just in case you want to automate something that you have to use the context menu for, now you can do it without the context menu, directly through a hotkey.
If you want to do it on a file you have selected, you need to use Autohotkey to get the location/name of the selected file, then use it in the command (as above) as a variable or something.
I imagine you could send AppsKey and then the relevant number of ups or downs to reach the option or use alt combinations instead. But that seems less reliable and not possible in the background.
If you do control-V on a folder, it pastes the file from your clipboard into the folder, if you have a folder selected. Otherwise it will simply paste as normal.
@Alraxite I do that just to make sure it doesn't interfere with any real shortcuts I use, when I'm testing stuff. Although I do use hotkeys like that for mouse gestures (the gesture programme triggers an Autohotkey hotkey), because I never type them by hand anyway.
@Alraxite Not sure it worked reliably yet, though.
Incidentally, I used to abbreviate Autohotkey as AHk because the k isn't capitalised in it, but then I saw that the website itself calls it AHK, so now I use this instead.
@Cerberus I don't know. That might be the case but I think for the default options, like Properties, New, etc. the Alt-combo remains the same (in that it doesn't change it due to the addition of some other menu item).
But that is just a guess.
If you have a context menu editor, you can probably test it.
Try putting something like wen (new backwards) and see what it does.
Or create a menu item that includes all and only the underlined letters of the other menu items to see if it tries to change the underlined character.
But simply using other solutions would be far more relable, I would agree.
I wonder whether Scotland will finally get its Jacobite monarch back. I also wonder what new name the English will choose for their vestigial nationette.
There once was a small pod of dolphin Who decided that they would go golfin’ They did well, of course Each got albatross Despite having clubs made of olfin
There once was a small pod of whale Who decided they would go for a sail They didn't do so well But each got a good story tell Despite having to go through hell
Addiction, be it to exogenic psychotropic chemicals or to endogenic ones triggered by various activities or to gambling or to sex—perhaps even to Internet and “smart phone” social activities—is both a very complex thing and a very simple one. It is complex in that like a firmware update, it rewires the reward centers of the human brain, that gland whose neural connections constitute the most complex thing in the known universe. It is simple in that it compels us by stifling our impulse controls.
And it overrides executive functions that would otherwise protect us from self-harm.
@IceBoy There is sound neuro-physiological evidence for the inclusion of various sorts of dependencies and addictions in the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, but they would still merit placement there even if they were “merely” social behavioral issues that had reached a disabling level of influence that negatively affected their victims’ lives and livelihoods, and the lives of those around them.
You cannot just say “Which one should I use?” without providing a surrounding context that would recommend one over another: you didn’t specify use for what. Otherwise you’ll get rescue readings the likes of “After gobbling down that entire turducken, I’m no more hungry than a goose after his final fortnight of gavage just prior to harvesting his foie gras.” — tchrist2 mins ago
Few topics would be less suited than those are to this crisp and clear Sunday morning as our newly risen daystar shines its oriflamme of hope in equal measure upon every amber fold and every quiet glen: for though weeping and despair may endure all the night long, the shout of joy that cometh in the morning is a gentle rain that slakes the tortured desert of every man’s soul.