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Graphics Design & Publishing


Topic: QuicKeys Application Event opens InDesign Library on launch
 


Set up an App Event shortcut which will automatically trigger something you have set up each time you open a particular application or if you prefer, each time that application comes to the front. To illustrate—you could have a particular folder open each time you opened a certain application. I included an extra step that opens my InDesign Library each time I open InDesign.

 
Source: Customer submission by Linda Cameron | -- | Top

Topic: Standardize key combinations between various applications
 


With QuicKeys I don't even have to remember which program I'm actually using. I use the alias feature or the shortcut feature to standardize my favorite keystrokes from program to program (and version to version). For example: Command/Control-K opens the color palette in all my graphics programs. I also set up a sequence to create PDF files for our printers. There are lots of steps that are easy to forget. It takes awhile to run so I use that opportunity to stretch my shoulders. Between my new ergonomic mouse and QuicKeys, I may never have to see my chiropractor again.

 
Source: Customer submission by Suzie | -- | Top

Topic: Store images and color information in Clips
 


Use Clips to save, organize and store commonly used text and graphics which can then be recalled and inserted into any document at a moments notice.

 
Source: TRIGGERED QuicKeys newsletter article | Read It | Top

Topic: Change layers with a keystroke
 


... one of the most practical and timesaving shortcuts is when I'm using either Fontographer or FontLab. With these applications, when constructing the outlines of a font character, I am constantly selecting different layers in which to work. There is no key combo or menu item to select a layer -- the 'Layers' window floats around on the desktop, and to select a layer the user has to manually click the layer in the Layers window.

So, I have constructed a Mouse Click for each layer and assigned each one an F-Key. Now it's so easy to switch between the layers -- F1, Outline layer; F2, Mask layer, and so on. It must have saved me hours and hours over the years.

And that's only one. Don't know where I'd be without QK ;-)

 
Source: Customer submission by Roy Preston | -- | Top

Topic: Control Photoshop with a toolbar full of your custom QuicKeys shortcuts
 


"I do a large number of graphic files every day in Photoshop. The work it takes to take each image and size them accordingly, apply various filters, convert them to other formats, optimize them for the web, save them in a variety of formats in everything from bmp's to tif's etc, is mind boggling! This work used to be more than I could accomplish in a single day. With QuicKeys I am able to do the same work in just TWO HOURS!"

"I created a toolbar which I keep on top of Photoshop. I then create a wide number of macros (55 total), that automatically set the focus to the image I am working on, and then each macro can accomplish different tasks.
For example, one macro does the following:"

  1. Set the focus to the image
  2. resize the image to the predetermined size
  3. select a brightness and contrast filter and lighten the image by 3 settings
  4. select the sharpen setting and sharpen the image by 2 settings
  5. save the image to a bmp format
  6. convert the image to 256 colours from true colour
  7. save the image again to a bmp format with a second name - but now saved in 256 colour mode
  8. optimize the image for use on the web as a .jpg,
  9. save the image one last time - this time in .jpg format for the web
  10. close the image out of Photoshop
  11. move the focus to the next image and then stop

"The time savings is nothing short of amazing. I have never missed a deadline thanks to QuicKeys and I am able to take on new clients for web work every day, since I have a lot more free time. QuicKeys has allowed me to save a single image in 3 different formats should I need to go back to either format again, all without touching more than one mouse button. Resizing an image took a great deal of work, but now with QuicKeys, every single image is exactly the size I need."

 
Source: Customer submission by Doug Haworth | -- | Top

Topic: P is for Picas in InDesign
 


A suggestion by Steve Harley on the InDesign list: use an macro program (such as QuicKeys) to define a key on the number pad for the 'p' in dimensions set in picas and points. One suggestion was to remap "=" to "p" making it operative in just the apps that need it.

 
Source: Steve Harley on the InDesign List | Read It | Top

Topic: Crop & save screenshots in Photoshop
 


When putting documentation together with screenshots I often set up and snap ten or twenty screens, then open them all, crop them and save them as a group. QuicKeys makes this much easier by automating all but the screen area selection step. I simply count the number of screenshots to crop and hit my hot key to start the ball rolling:

  1. A "Repeat" step puts up a dialog and asks me how many times to run the shortcut. I respond with "10" for example.
  2. A "Wait for user action" step waits for me to click my main mouse button. This is the point where I use my mouse to select the desired portion of the screenshot. When I click and drag to select the area to crop, nothing happens. But when I -release- my mouse button this tells QuicKeys to continue on to the next step.
  3. A "Menu Selection" step chooses "Crop" from the Image menu. This crops the image to the area I'd selected with my mouse.
  4. "Pause" for 1 second while Photoshop does the crop...
  5. A "Type Keystroke" shortcut sends Command+S to Photoshop, telling it to save the current screenshot.
  6. "Pause" for 0.5 seconds while Photoshop does the save.
  7. A "Type Keystroke" shortcut sends Command+W to Photoshop, telling it to close the current window.
  8. End Repeat.

Now the next image is up and QuicKeys is patiently paused at step #2 waiting for me to select the area to be cropped again.

 
Source: Alan Eshelman, Technical Writing | -- | Top

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