Scripsit Fred B. diē 3.5.2006 12:39:
On the other hand I don't understand you neither, Bernhard. What's so hard about changing a keybinding or two??? e.g. I changed cmd + [ to cmd + (, etc.
Changing a key binding or two is not a big thing, but if Allan decides what keyboard I should use and seems to say that the others are unsupported and irrelevant[1], I don't want to use the programme – maybe he has other ideas on how I should work, too. After Allan's last comment, I see no big problem at all.
(But of course, at the wrong moment, even changing a key binding or two can be annoying (AFAIK there is no list of key bindings by "mode") so I stumble upon conflicts by accident and have to guess which key combinations are still "free" – not so smart, but I am certainly able to live with it, now that I understood how key bindings in OS X work.)
[1] That's how I understood him first, but he has relativated nearly everything he said. So let's just say there were two people who ridiculously got in a fight about keyboard layouts.
If you are ready to drop TM for such a minor thing, I wonder why you bought it first...
I liked it, it integrated with programmes I use, the developer seemed to be helpful generally. That's why I was irritated when he seemed quite arrogant at what I thought was easier to take care of on his side than on mine (but maybe the idea that people shouln't be able to shadow Alt bindings was just as arrogant as I thought it was to shadow Alt bindings in "standard" bundles. Sorry.)
Cheers, Bernhard