Prerequisite, first familiar keyboard shortcut symbol: http://www.cnblogs.com/EasonJim/p/6350075.html
Basic operation:
Command-z Revocation
Command-x Cut
Command-c Copy (copy)
Command-v paste
Command-a full selection (All)
Command-s Saving (Save)
Command-f Search (Find)
:
Command-shift-4 intercepts the selected screen area to a file
Command-shift-3 intercept all screens to file
Command-shift-control-3 intercept all screens to clipboard
Command-shift-4 intercepts the selected screen area to a file, or presses the SPACEBAR to capture only one window
Command-shift-control-4 intercepts the selected screen area to the Clipboard, or presses the SPACEBAR to capture only one window
In the application:
Command-option-esc to open the Force exit window
Command-h Hiding (hide) the currently running application window
Command-option-h hiding (hide) Other application windows
Command-q exit (quit) the front-most application
Command-shift-z redo, that is, reverse operation of undo
Command-tab in the Open Applications list to the next most recently used application, equivalent to Windows (ALT + TAB)
Command-option-esc Open the Force exit window and, if an application is unresponsive, select Force exit in the window list
Text Processing:
Command-RIGHT ARROW moves the cursor to the end of the current line
Command-b Toggle the selected text bold display
Fn-delete is equivalent to delete on the PC full-size keyboard, which is deleted backwards
fn-up Arrows up one page (page UP)
fn-down arrow Scroll down one page (page down)
fn-LEFT ARROW Scroll to beginning of document (Home)
fn-RIGHT ARROW scroll to end of document (end)
Command-RIGHT ARROW moves the cursor to the end of the current line
Command-LEFT ARROW moves the cursor to the beginning of the current line
Command-down ARROW moves the cursor to the end of the document
Command-up ARROW moves the cursor to the beginning of the document
option-RIGHT ARROW moves the cursor to the end of the next word
Option-LEFT ARROW moves the cursor to the beginning of the previous word
Control-a move to the beginning of a line or paragraph
In the Finder:
Command-option-v Cut Files
Command-shift-n Creating a new folder (new)
Command-shift-g window, can enter absolute path Direct folder (Go)
Return this is not really shortcut keys, click on the file, press to rename the file
Command-o Open the selected item. Open file in Mac not like Windows directly press ENTER
Command-option-v function is equivalent to file clipping in Windows. Copy the file (command-c) to a different location, press this shortcut at the destination and the file will be clipped to this location
Command-up Arrow opens the folder containing the current folder, which is equivalent to "up" in Windows
Command-delete moving files to the Trash
Command-shift-delete emptying the wastepaper basket
Spacebar to quickly view the selected file, which is the preview feature
In the browser:
Control-tab Turn to next tab page
Command-l cursor jumps directly to the address bar
Control-tab Turn to next tab page
Control-shift-tab Turn to previous tab page
command-Plus or equal sign Enlarge page
command-minus Zoom Page
Shortcut keys for Mac startup and shutdown:
Command-option-p-r resetting NVRAM
Option to press immediately after power on, the boot manager will be displayed, if the MAC is equipped with a dual system or a bootable USB flash drive, you can select the Startup disk in the boot manager
Command-r Press immediately after power on to turn on OS X recovery (Recovery)
Command-option-p-r immediately after power-on, reset NVRAM. Sometimes the computer will have some minor problems, resetting NVRAM is your first choice in addition to restarting and trying to fix it.
command-option-control-power button Exits all applications, allows you to save documents, then shuts down
Press and hold the power button for 5 seconds to force the Mac to shut down
Original: http://jingyan.baidu.com/article/08b6a591aac09614a909224f.html
Frequently used shortcut keys (RPM) under Mac