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#15 | |
Senior Member
Sep 2005
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![]() Quote:
All key stroke functions were done with the command key and other such modifiers rather than with function keys and such. In fact the original human interface guidelines were designed stating that software developers were to minimize the number of functions that required the use of a mouse. (Clearly some operations required the use of a mouse, e.g., drawing in MacPaint.) The goal was to be able to do as much with the keyboard as possible. This is why Apple strongly pushed that developers put "command keys", as they were commonly referred to back then, for all menu items as well as many functions that were not in menus. The basic concept was to simplify the human interface: as much as is realistic with the basic keyboard and the rest with the mouse. The user was supposed to use which ever (keyboard or mouse) was best for them. This turned out to be a restrictive system, and Apple started shipping keyboards with numerical keypads, direction keys, function keys and such. However, unfortunately, there is still the occasional throwback to those old concepts -- case in point: the new wireless keyboard for the newest iMac. IMO, just plain dumb |
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