![]() Why is KeyTraino so much less annoying than Clippy? Send this file to the KeyTraino website and it will be available for slurping into people's copies of KeyTraino, is they use your application. Jeff Atwood, from Coding Horror, would love KeyTraino, if he ever tried it.Īs a developer you can build a KeyTraino file that will tell KeyTraino what keystrokes your application uses, and what features are on your toolbars, menus etc. Keyboard junkies like Scott Hanselman should be all over KeyTraino. KeyTraino is something that Jon Galloway could use to help him achieve Mouseless Computing. Not unlike TimeSnapper, you can leave KeyTraino recording all the time, and it won't noticeably impact the performance of your machine. Using this information keytrain is then able to provide you with a neat little summary of what keystrokes could be helping you the most. If you let it, KeyTraino will record your behaviour inside an application (microsoft word, or visual studio for example). When you use the toolbar, the menus or the context-menus of an application, KeyTraino shows the alternative keystroke you could've used. When you hold down a function key - KeyTraino tells you what that key will give you, and what it *can* do if you combine it with other keys. KeyTraino provides a friendly semi-transparent popup window (don't worry - no animated paperclips) that gives you all the options available to you for the current application. When you're using an application and you hold down the control key, the alt key, or the WinKey. KeyTraino knows all about the office suite, many business applications, many development tools (even query analyser!) ![]() KeyTraino knows all the keystrokes for all the applications you use. ![]() KeyTraino is a tiny and super useful utility. Atwood, blog, editor, hanselman, html, microISV, microsoft, sql, toolbar, tools
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