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Howto Disable keyboard Shortcuts for Tabs

  • 2 תגובות
  • 1 has this problem
  • 10 views
  • תגובה אחרונה מאת cor-el

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I need to enter accented characters in text entry boxes on line. In order to do so, I use the ASCII keyboard shortcuts(e.g. an accented a= ALT+0228).

But I cannot do this with FF 14 as FF helpfully traps the keystrokes to send me to another tab in my current window. Yes, I have installed Customizable Shortcuts--this did not solve the problem ( I even set the TAB shortcuts to rare combos).

I have no use for "helpful" tab jumping key traps; I do have great use for being able to type accented characters while using FF. How do I disable all TAB switching/manipulation keyboard shortcuts. I found nothing in about:config that appeared useful.

All I want to do is disable all of the FF TAB keytraps.

Thanks for any suggestions.'italic text'

I need to enter accented characters in text entry boxes on line. In order to do so, I use the ASCII keyboard shortcuts(e.g. an accented a= ALT+0228). But I cannot do this with FF 14 as FF helpfully traps the keystrokes to send me to another tab in my current window. Yes, I have installed Customizable Shortcuts--this did not solve the problem ( I even set the TAB shortcuts to rare combos). I have no use for "helpful" tab jumping key traps; I do have great use for being able to type accented characters while using FF. How do I disable all TAB switching/manipulation keyboard shortcuts. I found nothing in about:config that appeared useful. All I want to do is disable all of the FF TAB keytraps. Thanks for any suggestions.''''italic text''''

כל התגובות (2)

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On Windows, it's the Ctrl key plus the tab number that switches tabs; I guess the Alt key is an OS convention on Linux?

It might be worth trying the keyconfig extension. More info:

Note: this is not the same extension as the "Key config" extension on the Add-ons site.

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Note that such Alt + number shortcuts only work on Windows.
On Windows you may need to check if Num Lock is set to prevent interpreting the key press as a command when it is disabled.

On Linux it is common to use a compose key (usually the windows key next to the right Alt key) to compose characters.
That is much easier then using an Alt key combination anyway.