To the OP, there is a simple shortcut to use: alt cmd space (to switch between keyboard layouts). In the left pane, click Turn to see a list of the available tools that you can enable when you use Adobe Lightroom Classic. In the upper left side of the window, select the Crown tab. But then, nobody ever claimed that LR has the greatest UI or wasn't overladen with too many options. The window for Adobe Lightroom Classic appears. Interestingly, as I first tried cmd ], it increased the brush size, now it just rotates the image (with the Adjustment Brush tool in the tool strip of the Develop module selected). A confirmation that this is how the system thinks is that the shortcut cmd ] to increase the quote level in Mail is triggered with a German keyboard layout (where the ] is achieved via alt 6) by alt cmd 6 which is read as cmd (alt 6).īut Lightroom doesn't even appear to go so far as alt cmd 5 (or 6) does nothing. But alt cmd ' does not decrease the quote level as presumably the system reads that as cmd ¿, ie, cmd (alt '). The shortcut cmd ' (ie, cmd plus the second key to the left of the backspace key) does work to increase the quote level in Mail. In the French keyboard layout the apostrophe is the second key to the left of the backspace key. Unfortunately, this smartness doesn't extend to other keyboard layouts. In other words, it sees alt not as a modifier for the ' key but as a modifier for the shortcut cmd '. But the OS (or Mail.app) then doesn't interpret alt cmd ' as cmd (alt '), ie, cmd æ but as alt (cmd '). Now, on an English keyboard layout (US or British), typing alt ' results in æ. Happy Friday I’ve got a really quick and simple Lightroom tip today. The shortcut to decrease the quote level is alt cmd '. To give an example: In Mail.app, the shortcut for increasing the quote level is cmd ' (cmd apostrophe). And one that, I think might require a fix on the OS level (applications probably could work around it by customising keyboard shortcuts as the system language changes, though what actually matters is the keyboard layout, not the system language, and the two can easily differ). This has been a problem in many applications since essentially forever. I'd be inclined to file a bug report with Adobe. That's exactly what I see with an English (UK) keyboard.
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