Shortcuts are meant to be fast. Therefore, we’ve redesigned how they work to make them simpler and more intuitive, with fewer rules to remember.

A simpler way to use shortcuts

Previously, some multi-key shortcuts required long presses to activate each modifier. This is no longer needed, everything now follows the same simple interaction: tap to combine, long press to keep it active.

  • Tap modifier keys (Ctrl, Shift, Alt…) to combine them
  • Tap a regular key (letters, numbers, or keys like Esc and Tab) to execute the shortcut
  • Long press a modifier to keep it active across multiple actions

Works with your keyboard layout

Shortcuts now work with Latin-based keyboard layouts, just like on your computer. No need to switch to an English keyboard. Everything works the way you already expect.

Shortcuts in everyday use

Editing text

When working with text, actions often come in chains:

  • Ctrl + A → Ctrl + C → Ctrl + V

Now, you can simply:

  • Long Press Ctrl, then tap A, C, V

No need to re-activate the modifier each time.

Browsing the web

When navigating between tabs:

  • Hold Ctrl, tap T to open new tabs
  • Tap W to close them

The interaction stays consistent.

Quick access to system controls

Shortcuts also make it faster to trigger common system actions:

On Windows:

  • Win + D → Show desktop
  • Win + Tab → Open Task View
  • Alt + Tab → Switch between apps

On macOS:

  • Cmd + Tab → Switch between apps
  • Cmd + Space → Open Spotlight
  • Ctrl + ↑ → Mission Control

With modifiers staying active, these actions feel immediate and continuous.

Flexible tools, personal shortcuts

Everyone’s workflow is different. Beyond the standard shortcuts, many people rely on app-specific combinations, for editing, music production, coding, and more. That’s why personalization matters. The shortcuts you use every day are often tied to the tools you choose.

We’re working on making this more flexible and easier to set up, so your shortcuts work the way you expect, across the apps you use most.