Peter Lewis of Stairways Software has released Keyboard Maestro 10, a substantial update to the popular automation and clipboard utility. #1621: Apple Q3 2022 financials, Slack's new free plan restrictions, which OS features do you use?.#1622: OS feature survey results, Continuity Camera webcam preview, OWC miniStack STX.#1623: How to turn off YouTube's PiP, use AirPlay to Mac, and securely erase Mac drives.#1624: Important OS security updates, rescuing QuickTake 150 photos, AirTag alerts while traveling.#1625: Apple's "Far Out" event, the future of FileMaker, free NMUG membership, Quick Note and tags in Notes, Plex suffers data breach.However, it’s also lacking in a few key areas, namely the capability to easily create abbreviations based on the Clipboard or selected text, as well as support for some variables. Typinator is a solid text expander with some features not found in its competition. The only thing I really missed was the capability to insert special characters in my abbreviations-very useful for filling out Web forms. A long example, copied from Wikipedia, containing rich text and embedded images performed similarly well. In use, I found Typinator expanded my abbreviations quickly, even when using a ridiculously-long example (the entire text of the Declaration of Independence). You can import abbreviations from TypeIt4Me and TextExpander, making it easy to move to Typinator. If you use more than one Mac, Typinator can use either Dropbox or MobileMe to synchronize abbreviations from Mac to Mac. As someone with a large set of expansions, this feature makes it much simpler to find my seldom-used (but still important) ones. If there’s only one match, I would just press Return to insert the text into the frontmost text area if there’s more than one, I can choose the desired expansion with the arrow keys, or type more text in the search box to further narrow the results. Instead of having to remember which shortcut I assigned to which expansion, I can type Control-Enter to activate Typinator’s Spotlight-like search box (which appears at the top center of the screen), then type either part of the abbreviation or some portion of the expansion-in this example, part of the URL I want to insert-and Typinator instantly shows a list of matches. Typinator also includes abbreviation sets for HTML code, FileMaker functions, superscripts and subscripts, and auto-correction libraries in a few additional languages.įor example, I have about 20 different shortcuts for typing various URLs. I found this set really valuable, as it covers a huge assortment of typos. TidBITS that includes common typographical mistakes (such as producitve and indentify) that are more complex than the example I gave above. For instance, there’s a set of 2,300 auto corrections from Typinator ships with a number of predefined abbreviations, each stored in its own set. You can also make expansions follow the case you use when typing them: For example, you can types Btw when you want to insert By the way at the beginning of a sentence, and btw to put by the way in the middle. You can, however, specify whether or not the case of text matters (so Ttt and ttt can be separate abbreviations). Some other programs can do all of those things. But you can’t include special characters (Tab, Backspace, Return) or other abbreviations, you can’t run AppleScripts, and you can’t have the program pause for user input before it inserts the expanded text. Beyond date and time, you can insert the clipboard’s contents and position the cursor at a particular position in your expansion (useful when you need to type additional text after the expansion is pasted). Typinator is also more limited than its competitors in its support for variables.
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