
Perhaps in CS4 we’ll be able to find features faster, but for now this is it. Don’t forget to click Assign before pressing OK.īy the way, if you look closely, you’ll find that there are two more shortcuts right next to this one that let you open/close the palettes/panels on just the left or right side of the screen.ĭoes this seem painful? I was hoping that there’d be a QuickApply or Spotlight type feature inside the Keyboard Shortcuts dialog box in CS3, but there isn’t.

Use the text editor’s find feature (probably Command-F/Ctrl-F) to search for the name.Click Show Set, which launches your friendly neighborhood text editor and shows you every shortcut in the program.That’s how you find out the proper name for this feature. You’ll see the feature name show up beneath the field. Click in the New Shortcut field and press the shortcut you’re looking for (in this case Command-Alt-Tab).The solution (and this goes for pretty much any shortcut you’re trying to track down): (On Windows, press Ctrl+Alt+Tab.) But how can you change the KBSC shortcut to something else? No doubt you know about Edit > Keyboard Shortcuts, but where in that dialog box will you find this feature? The feature you’re looking for is called “Open/Close all panels in side tabs” and this feature lives in both CS2 and CS3, and on both Mac and Windows. I found that Option-Command-Tab will do just that, but I would like to change that to a simpler shortcut (say F13) I cannot find where or how to change that shorcut.

I was looking for a way to expand and stash them with a keyboard shortcut. However for some they may be too large when open or too small when closed.
