Can I make Command-H go to history?

I don't have too much experience on the Mac (going strong since 2020). I never thought to go to my history but decided to see what was there. I know that most things ctrl does on another computer, the Command button does on a mac. I used a Chromebook beforehand and Ctrl-H always went to History. I tried it on a Mac and it just took me to Finder (the desktop, not the file manager). Can I change this?

MacBook Pro 16″, macOS 12.4

Posted on Jun 6, 2022 6:51 PM

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Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Posted on Jun 7, 2022 12:58 PM

Greetings, yminer12.


On your Mac: "Command-H: Hide the windows of the front app. To view the front app but hide all other apps, press Option-Command-H." Mac keyboard shortcuts


However, you can create custom shortcuts:


"Create keyboard shortcuts for apps on Mac

You can create your own keyboard shortcuts for menu commands in any macOS app, including the Finder. This might be useful if a global shortcut, which works the same with most apps, conflicts with a specific app shortcut. In this case, you could create a new key combination.


  1. On your Mac, choose Apple menu  > System Preferences, click Keyboard , then click Shortcuts.
  2. Select App Shortcuts on the left, click the Add button , click the Application pop-up menu, then choose a specific app or All Applications.
  3. For example, to set a shortcut for a TextEdit command, choose TextEdit. If an app isn’t in the list, choose Other, then locate the app using the Open dialog. Some apps may not allow you to set keyboard shortcuts.
  4. If you want to set a shortcut for a menu command that appears in many apps, choose All Applications.
  5. In the Menu Title field, type the menu command for which you want to create a shortcut, exactly as the command appears in the app, including the > character (type ->), ellipses (type three periods without spaces or press Option-; (semi-colon)), or other punctuation.
  6. For example, to set a shortcut for the default ligature command in TextEdit (Format > Font > Ligatures > Use Default), you would type Format->Font->Ligatures->Use Default in the Menu Title field. To set a shortcut for the Export as PDF command (File > Export as PDF…), you would type File->Export as PDF… in the field.
  7. Click in the Keyboard Shortcut field, press the key combination that you want to use as the keyboard shortcut, then click Add.
  8. For example, press the Control, Option, and Z keys at the same time. You can use a key only once in a key combination.

You can create keyboard shortcuts only for existing menu commands. You can’t create keyboard shortcuts for general purpose tasks, such as opening an app.

If you create a keyboard shortcut that already exists for another command or another app, your new shortcut won’t work—you need to change your new shortcut or the other shortcut. To change a shortcut, select it, click the key combination, then press a new key combination.

To remove a shortcut that you created, select the shortcut, then click the Delete button "Create keyboard shortcuts for apps on Mac


We hope this helps!


Sincerely.

1 reply
Question marked as Top-ranking reply

Jun 7, 2022 12:58 PM in response to yminer12

Greetings, yminer12.


On your Mac: "Command-H: Hide the windows of the front app. To view the front app but hide all other apps, press Option-Command-H." Mac keyboard shortcuts


However, you can create custom shortcuts:


"Create keyboard shortcuts for apps on Mac

You can create your own keyboard shortcuts for menu commands in any macOS app, including the Finder. This might be useful if a global shortcut, which works the same with most apps, conflicts with a specific app shortcut. In this case, you could create a new key combination.


  1. On your Mac, choose Apple menu  > System Preferences, click Keyboard , then click Shortcuts.
  2. Select App Shortcuts on the left, click the Add button , click the Application pop-up menu, then choose a specific app or All Applications.
  3. For example, to set a shortcut for a TextEdit command, choose TextEdit. If an app isn’t in the list, choose Other, then locate the app using the Open dialog. Some apps may not allow you to set keyboard shortcuts.
  4. If you want to set a shortcut for a menu command that appears in many apps, choose All Applications.
  5. In the Menu Title field, type the menu command for which you want to create a shortcut, exactly as the command appears in the app, including the > character (type ->), ellipses (type three periods without spaces or press Option-; (semi-colon)), or other punctuation.
  6. For example, to set a shortcut for the default ligature command in TextEdit (Format > Font > Ligatures > Use Default), you would type Format->Font->Ligatures->Use Default in the Menu Title field. To set a shortcut for the Export as PDF command (File > Export as PDF…), you would type File->Export as PDF… in the field.
  7. Click in the Keyboard Shortcut field, press the key combination that you want to use as the keyboard shortcut, then click Add.
  8. For example, press the Control, Option, and Z keys at the same time. You can use a key only once in a key combination.

You can create keyboard shortcuts only for existing menu commands. You can’t create keyboard shortcuts for general purpose tasks, such as opening an app.

If you create a keyboard shortcut that already exists for another command or another app, your new shortcut won’t work—you need to change your new shortcut or the other shortcut. To change a shortcut, select it, click the key combination, then press a new key combination.

To remove a shortcut that you created, select the shortcut, then click the Delete button "Create keyboard shortcuts for apps on Mac


We hope this helps!


Sincerely.

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Can I make Command-H go to history?

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