Building something like this is really not much more difficult than writing a Mail.app rule. Note: a larger version of this image is available on Github.Įach one of those “blocks” in Keyboard Maestro is just something that I have clicked and dragged from Keyboard Maestro’s list of available actions, and selected from the various drop-down menus. So here is a screenshot of my Keyboard Maestro macro for Skitch: Some of you may already understand how to do this, but some of you may want to see how it actually looks in Keyboard Maestro. “OK, I get the idea, show me how you do it…” The “Else” section is left empty, because if the app is running, we don’t want Keyboard Maestro to do anything when the keyboard shortcut is pressed, because YourApp will. Over time, you learn that whenever you want to do Imagine you have some keyboard shortcut in your head, such as ⌘+ ⇧+ 5 for Skitch, or ⌘+ ⇧+ O for “Quick Add” to OmniFocus. Tom Siko asked if I’d be willing to share it, so here it is.Įven if you don’t use OmniFocus, this idea can be re-used for any application that you run via keyboard shortcut, such as Skitch (or, my preference, Skitch 1). On Mac Power Users 181, I mentioned that I have a keyboard shortcut for OmniFocus’ “Quick Entry” which works even if OmniFocus isn’t running.
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