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What's the worst shortcut you have in your "muscle memory"?

For example, mine is CTRL-L: compiles the current object in Sybase Powerbuilder, but deletes the current line in Visual Studio.

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101 Answers

vote up 1 vote down

F5 is refresh in most sane worlds, but in Lotus Notes, it's "Lock Screen". Extra frustrating to be in the middle of something.

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At work, my systems are connected to a switch box. If I cut-and-paste something (using Ctrl-X, Ctrl-V) too quickly I activate the "Switch to next machine" function of the switch box (Ctrl, Ctrl). *sigh

So, usually, I just use Shift-Insert for Paste. This works great until I have to use my wife's PC. Her Insert key is in a different location... so I end up hitting Shift-Del instead. *sigh

Sometimes you just can't win.

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Ctrl-W.

I use it all the time in VIM to navigate between panes. Unfortunately, in every other editor I use (I have various IDEs I use depending on the language), it's "close window".

It's especially bad in netbeans, where I installed the jvi plugin. So most VIM commands work, but occasionally I forget to avoid Ctrl-W and accidentally close a file.

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Alt-Spacebar, C. I use a Model M at home and there's this satisfying "click-thunk-click" sound every time it's typed.

It's also a great way to confuse newbie and mouse-only Windows users, since they'll see something flash momentarily and suddenly the whole window's gone.

I don't know if it'd qualify as muscle-memory, but when I'm thinking about something while seated at my keyboard I find myself hovering over the wasd keys, a side-effect of too much CS and TF2, I'm sure. :)

Speaking of which, here's a fun tip: Go to Google Maps and find a place that has street view. Open the street view window and give wasd a try. :)

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Ctrl-X is used as the prefix for a lot of things in Emacs. It's often bad when I hit that when Emacs is not the app with focus.

Especially annoying for me is that when I run Emacs in an X window on my Windows desktop, the cursor is always blinking in Emacs, even when that window is not active. So I often think it is active when it isn't.

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l33t. Using numbers instead of letters. f0r ex4mpl3 I'll t3nd t0 us3 l0ts and l0ts 0f 0s instead 0f o's. Du3 t0 th3ir use in p455w0rd5

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Browser testing on Mac running Parallels.

Bouncing between Ctrl-R and Cmd-R

Not horrible, but that's the one that gets me the most.

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CTRL-L: Focuses the location bar in Firefox, but clears the conversation history in Pidgin. I switch between the two frequently.

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I'm an old gamer... I still type WASD alot without meaning to. :( Phone numbers are pretty bad... I can type out most of the phone numbers of people I know I just cannot recite them.

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In Bash (simulating Emacs-like keybindings), Alt-[blah] is basically an extended version of [blah]: Ctrl-D is delete, Ctrl-Alt-D is delete word, etc.

Sometimes I use Ctrl-H for backspace, other times I use the actual Backspace key. Sometimes I use Ctrl-Backspace because my left hand has already decided to press Control before my right hand has decided whether to hit H or Backspace.

I use Ctrl-Alt-H or Alt-Backspace for backword. The problem comes when unintentionally I hit Ctrl-Alt-Backspace instead of either of the above: this resets X, which kills everything I'm working on.

Solution: Option "DontZap" "on". I just have to remember to do this on every new system I set up.

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vote up 4 vote down

Weird, no-one has mentioned the infamous Quake claw :)

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Crtl+z and this is because in VMWare it suspends your virtual machine and I accidently hit this in the middle of a presentation.

Needless to say we just laughed and had a 5 min. break before moving on.

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Ctrl-X, S. In Emacs, it saves the current buffer. In Visual Studio 2005 (with Visual Studio 6 key bindings), it cuts the current line and then saves the file.

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In the spanish versions of many office applications (MS looking at you), Ctrl + S, instead of saving, it underlines text, so when you quit carelessly you can end with no changes saved ...

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vote up 14 vote down

Control-Enter. In my chat client, this inserts a newline into the usual single-line input field, but in Outlook, this sends a mail, in its current incomplete and embarrassing state.

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thankfully Thunderbird pops up saying "Do you want to send this email now?" when you use the Ctrl+Enter shortcut – nickf Mar 23 at 5:47
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vote up 3 vote down

I have a mac at home, but use VS2008 at work. I often find myself doing Win+ instead of ctrl+.

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vote up 8 vote down

As a VI user, pressing esc, :w to save my work or :q to close MS Word (for example)

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"ESC" when I'm done typing in non-vi/vim environments. Most apps ignore the escape, but in a lot of IM clients ESC seems to mean "throw away all the stuff I just wrote". Since I usually only do it after I've typed a lot, I usually lose quite a bit of information.

tappitytappitytappitytappitytappity-tap-AAARGGGGGGHHHHH!!!!!!

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vote up 0 vote down

After programming in C# for most of the day, I always type "string" rather than "String" when declaring a string variable. Then I see the little red squiggly line in Eclipse...

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vote up 8 vote down

Emacs Meta-W (copy region) is one of my often-used key commands. Works great... except when I forget that I am using the terminal app on my wife's Mac. (Meta-W is Command-W => Close window.)

The "muscle-memory" kicks in faster than the supervisor thought process. I can almost feel that part of my brain saying "wait, don't do... D'oh too late!" every time I do that.

Actually, Emacs in general has turned into muscle-memory, and when I get deep into coding, I sometimes forget that I'm in an alternate editor universe, and then quickly get into a mess when I rapid-fire type in navigation command streams.

It's also my Emacs-ish tendency that has me preferring to use Control-ESC (instead of the dedicated Windows key) to bring up the Windows Start Menu. It's normally not a problem, except my laptop's Fn+ESC invokes system Standby, which leads to a 30 second penalty-box-time as I go into suspend and then re-wake the machine. If I had a network connection (SSH or Network file copy), I also lose the network connection because the suspend kills the connection. Aargh!

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vote up 3 vote down

Left Ctrl + Shift + Left/Right arrow keys, when working on a laptop with the leftmost Fn key (where Ctrl should be), it's frustrating...

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I'm usually working in Vim, and I try to stay out of edit mode as much as possible. This means that I almost always hit escape after typing a string of text - even in my Outlook email.

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I sometimes do this and I rarely use VIM ever. – Mr. Shiny and New Feb 17 at 18:27
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vote up 65 vote down

Backspace. It's backspace in everything except web browsers, where it goes back a page in your history depending on where the input focus is. Irritates the hell out of me, especially if I've just typed a huge forum entry that the browser decided not to cache.

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+eleventybillion (if I could) on this one! ;-) Whoever decided backspace should go to the previous page in a web browser needs to have some seriously painful punishment inflicted upon them! – Brian Knoblauch Oct 27 '08 at 17:48
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One thing that always irked the crap out of me in Firefox. I've developed a defense mechanism: I compulsively Ctrl+A, Ctrl+C to copy what I've typed so far, in case of disaster, – TM Oct 27 '08 at 22:36
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You can get rid of this behaviour in firefox. It's the browser.backspace_action property. Possible values are here: kb.mozillazine.org/Browser.backspace_action#Possi… If you actually want to move back/forward with your keyboard, use Alt+Left, Alt+Right respectively – AgentConundrum Mar 23 at 6:15
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vote up 0 vote down

F5 - In Internet Explorer, Firefox and Google Chrome it refreshes the page. In MSSQL Enterprise Manager, it refreshes the current query results. But in Zend Studio (which I use for PHP development) it starts a debug session... arrgh!

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vote up 1 vote down

Being a Mac owner but working in windows/visual studio. I forget many windows shortcut without really learning Mac ones.

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I'll sometimes hit CTRL-K/CTRL-Q to quit (or other Wordstar combinations) in vi thinking I'm in joe. Drives me up the wall. :D

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F9. In Delphi, it launches the program under the Debugger, in Visual Studio it toggles a breakpoint.

Also F12. In Delphi, toggles between Code and Design view, but in Visual Studio it Goes to a Definition.

F5 was already listed.

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Ctrl-U: I'm used to it erasing the input line in Unix, but in Firefox, it's View Source. Often leads to annoyance when I try to erase the address bar quickly. Thankfully at least Opera follows the Unix way.

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As a longtime Vim user, h-j-k-l are my number one nemesis. :-) I'm constantly attempting to use them within other editors...somehow it just never works. You should see the number of times I randomly insert "jjjjjjjj" within a block of code before I realize what I've done.

I have found that you can map Alt+{h,j,k,l} within Eclipse and jEdit, which is better than nothing.

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vote up 44 vote down

My password.

Don't know how to write it on a phone or something else (ancient history: pencil) since i frankly don't know my own password except in muscle memory.

This is my best excuse for not switching to Dvorak layout.

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The upside is that it's really easy to find out what it is: type it out in clear text. – titaniumdecoy Oct 27 '08 at 18:39
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