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How can I unbind Command-Control-Space from Mac OS X 10.9?

This shortcut shows Special Characters table and conflicts with my Emacs key binding, and I couldn't disable it from System Preference->Keyboard->Shortcuts.

Thanks.

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3 Answers 3

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At least on macOS Sierra to macOS Big Sur ⌃Space is the default binding for Select the previous input source which is on by default (even if only one input source is activated).

You can free it by:

  1. Open System Preferences
  2. Go to Keyboard > Shortcuts > Input Sources
  3. Untick "Select the previous input source"

Afterwards, you should be able to bind it as expected.

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  • 3
    I have tried unticking it, but apps still don't receive ^space.. Is there a trick to unbind it? Using Catalina
    – P Varga
    Jan 6, 2020 at 10:56
  • It's so annoying that it restores the default key binding once you switch to other language keyboard, even you've made the config Jan 20, 2020 at 9:46
  • I had to untick it twice! I only had one language. Untick. The entire "Input sources" shortcut category disappeared. Still not receiving ^ Space. Added another input source. Unticked the input source switch input shortcut again. Receiving ^ Space! Removed the extra input source. Thanks Apple!
    – GusOst
    Feb 18, 2022 at 14:53
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    I had to reboot before the setting took effect.
    – sferencik
    Apr 17, 2022 at 16:32
  • I got fed up without this feature. You're gem. Thanks @einSelbst
    – Vish
    Nov 2, 2022 at 7:11
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You can create custom keyboard shortcuts for most app's menubar choices in System Preferences. If a desired key combination is losing precedence to a default shortcut that you don't use and can't easily disable, simply override it with a new, unobtrusive shortcut.

Open System Prefs / Keyboard / Shortcuts. Select App Shortcuts from the left pane. Toggle the All Applications category's triangle in the main window to point downward (if it's not open already).

If there's an item named Emoji & Symbols* shown there, then click its shortcut combination and enter a new shortcut (such as option-shift-command-t, in this case).

If there's not an item named Emoji & Symbols under All Applications, click the + button at the bottom, type or copy-paste Emoji & Symbols, and then enter a new keyboard shortcut (option-shift-command-t, or anything really). This will free the control-command-space combination for you to use as a specialized shortcut elsewhere.

To remove your custom shortcut, just click to highlight it in the main window of this preference pane, and click the button at the bottom. The custom shortcut will disappear and the default action will resume.

*Note: On versions older than Mac OS 10.10.3, the menu item is called Special Characters… instead of Emoji & Symbols.

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    This advice was helpful in stopping (unused) Outlook from opening when I hit the wrong key combo for Chrome Developer Tools: added cmd-shift-I as a Chrome shortcut and now Outlook doesn't open when I hold shift instead of option.
    – eon
    Jul 22, 2014 at 15:13
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    You are my hero. Thanks! I had been told this particular shortcut was not replaceable.
    – Aster
    Apr 10, 2018 at 14:17
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I don't know of any way to disable this, but an alternative option might be to create a shortcut for the app you want to use that in. I created a Command-Control-Space shortcut for Chrome and now Command-Control-Space doesn't bring up the special character palette anymore in Chrome.

failing that you may be better off asking in Apple Stackexchange

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