Comments
-
Greg Hurrell
Thanks very much for submitting the feature request. Unfortunately, to my knowledge there's no way to implement this kind of thing without hacking the OS.
I too have an Apple Bluetooth Keyboard, as well as a normal Apple Pro Keyboard (USB), and on both of them there are some keys that can never be assigned to hot keys because the system appears to be intercepting them before they are ever passed on to applications. Same thing happens on PowerBook keyboards. For example, on my keyboard, these special keys include the volume up, down and mute keys; the eject key; and some function keys.
In the case of the intercepted function keys (ones like F14 and F15 which are used to control LCD brightness), the application only "sees" them if the user is holding down a modifier key as well (such as Shift, Control, Command etc). As far as I know there is no way to get around this limitation because it's happening at the OS level. Hacking the OS (perhaps with a kernel module) is something way out of my area of expertise.
But let's leave this feature request open and if any more information becomes available we can look into it.
-
Greg Hurrell
Changing assignment to reflect my new email address.
https://wincent.dev/a/news/archives/2006/05/change_of_email.php
Add a comment
Comments are now closed for this issue.