Hypnos Mac OS
To be honest, there is probley very few reasons for a casual user to touch the CLI.
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One of things I like about using the same toolkit just about everywhere in my desktop is consistency — nothing looks distractingly out of place, all the widgets are familiar and do what I intend, and this lets me focus on my work.
I've been using it for almost 20 years. I can see very few reasons for a casual user to ever touch the GUI. But then, that really depends on WHY one is using Linux. For me, it's almost aways been as a server. Being able to do everything I need to do over ssh is great, especially when the system is somewhere else and I'm may be accessing it from an iPad, or it may only be 15 feet away, on a shelf in a closet and without any sort of video-out, and without enough RAM to run much of a GUI desktop environment.Most UNIX software has config files designed for editing by a human in a basic text editor. Don't fight it, man. This isn't the Mac with its XML plists, or windows with its registry. (Not that I have a problem with the Mac, I use one all the time. In fact, most of the time I'm ssh'ed in to a linux server, its from the Mac terminal.)
Click here to return to the 'Place a character palette in the menubar' hint |
Hypnosis Mic Osaka Division
Can't seem to find this option. I can only guess it appears only if you've installed more than English language in your install. Can anyone comfirm this?
Mine was an unchecked box under English
System Pref > Intl > Input Menu and then look among your selections
Hypnos Mask
My installation is English-only, and it works fine...
-rob.
I'm glad to see apple has finally added a shortcut to getting at characters we may not use often. In the past to write the 'mu' symbol, for example, I would have to launch KeyCaps and fiddle with modifier keys until I found option-m would do it, then go back to the app I was in and finally enter the character. Not exactly user-friendly.
Menu widgets like PopChar and PickChar solved this by allowing one-click (usually) access to any character possible. Apple's Character Pallet falls in between the old KeyCaps method and the third party solutions. Because of the way it is activated, and its layout, there is a good chance you are 3-4 clicks away from any character you might want and then you have this floating palette to dismiss (unless you are lucky enough to have extra screen real estate). Hopefully Apple will do a better job of organizing the palette and provide an option for a drop-down menu widget.
An apparent side effect of enabling the Character Palette is that AppleWorks actually obeys the system preferences to show the century in dates (e.g., so that you get 3/12/2003 instead of 3/12/03), which it otherwise seems to ignore.
Hypnos Mac Os Catalina
On my 10.2.4 system, running Stickies seems to turn on the preference to show the Character Palette even if it was off.