am I stupid in not knowing that you used. option 3 on a macbook pro to get
Am I stupid in not knowing that Option + 3 was needed to get # on a MacBook Pro keyboard?
MacBook Pro 13″, macOS 10.15
Am I stupid in not knowing that Option + 3 was needed to get # on a MacBook Pro keyboard?
MacBook Pro 13″, macOS 10.15
Thanks for the reply, Bob. I was puzzled because on my Macbook Pro there is 3, £ and # on the one key. Shift +3 gives me a £ sign and Option + 3 gives me the hash, but I spent ages working that out.
Thanks for the reply, Bob. I was puzzled because on my Macbook Pro there is 3, £ and # on the one key. Shift +3 gives me a £ sign and Option + 3 gives me the hash, but I spent ages working that out.
what you use depends on the keyboard-mapping selected.
BobTheFisherman is likely using U.S. which has the # as shift-3; Option -3 produces £
If you are using a U.K. layout, shift -3 produces £, and you need to use Option to get #
If you are using some other layout, keys will be different.
I like to use Keyboard Viewer to see exactly what keys are readily available:
Use the Keyboard Viewer on Mac - Apple Support
.
muffincat wrote:
Am I stupid in not knowing that Option + 3 was needed to get # on a MacBook Pro keyboard?
I use shift 3
#########
muffincat wrote:
Am I stupid in not knowing that Option + 3 was needed to get # on a MacBook Pro keyboard?
No. If you are used to a British windows keyboard, you expect to find # over at the right edge, and Apple's odd "British" input source putting it at Option 3 is definitely not intuitive.
muffincat wrote:
on my Macbook Pro there is 3, £ and # on the one key.
Interesting! Apple's keyboard reference doc doesn't show that yet. Do you also have 2, @, and € on one key?
Because you do not have a US keyboard. But there was no way for us to know that until you told us. Glad you got it worked out.
am I stupid in not knowing that you used. option 3 on a macbook pro to get