My first visit to the forums, and my first question!
MS Word allows users to attach a character string to a keystroke. Can TP do this? (I could find no mention of it in the forum, but TP may use unfamiliar terminology for this function.)
For example, most immediately I would like to attach the string
to some key combo involving "d," so whenever I have to add it to a new HTML file I can do so instantaneously.
I know I could turn on the macro recorder and attempt to type this string correctly (I can do that in Word, too), but it makes more sense to paste a string into a text window and then simply assign it to an unused keystroke.
I use it for exactly the task you describe, breaking it down between the header material, title material, initial stuff like navagation bars and scripts, and the footer...plus a great many other on-going things I use all the time in making pages.
And to make it faster, after you've created a clip in some book, goto
Configure->Prefs->Keyboard, in Categories select Clip Library and
in Commands select ClipPaste, Asssign the new shortcut key Alt-9.
The first time you use it, press Alt-0, highlight your clip, press Alt-9.
Repeat as needed with Alt-0-9.
Thanks for clarifying the TP's keystroke assignment process. I've actually used it before but didn't connect it to this problem. I'll follow your instructions as soon as I work out creating the clip file.
s_reynisson wrote:And to make it faster, after you've created a clip in some book, goto
Configure->Prefs->Keyboard, in Categories select Clip Library and
in Commands select ClipPaste, Asssign the new shortcut key Alt-9.
The first time you use it, press Alt-0, highlight your clip, press Alt-9.
Repeat as needed with Alt-0-9.
Thanks, MudGuard. Actually, I'm trying to avoid recording the keystrokes; I want to cut and paste them as a unit instead. Given the three-line character string I want to insert repeatedly (which has to be exact because it's the universal DOCTYPE comment recognized by browsers for XML), the chance that I will type it flawlessly while recording ranges from zero to slim. And as other "forumers" discuss elsewhere, TP doesn't have a macro editor to speak of, so I'd likely have to repeat the recording until I get it perfect (or record character error deletes as part of the macro).
Dale Mead
MudGuard wrote:Another way of doing it is to record the keystrokes as a macro and assign that macro to a keystroke...