Do you know what annoys me most about writing blog comments and forum responses? Lack of hot keys: to highlight a word with the cursor, I have to switch to Latin, write tags, switch again, do you know what saves me from irritation? A small Texter program that hangs in the tray and fulfills almost all my wishes regarding the text.
Texter, alas, does not emulate hot keys, but reacts to the entered letter combinations. If I have a link in my clipboard, then I write href, press the space bar, and the link appears inside the desired tag, and the cursor is exactly where you need to enter the name of the site. To achieve this, you just need to create a new expression in the Text: <a href=»%c»>%|</a>, call it href and check the box that the rule should be called after pressing the space bar.
Of course, the Texter can also be used for simpler tasks: for example, enter your address there (and a link to a picture with a travel map) — and hang it on a line like drs. The Texter is also ideal for juggling signatures in letters. But the essential problem is that he can no longer cope with the Cyrillic alphabet hammered into the expression (such a mishap does not happen with the clipboard).
But the program can do something else: if you switch to Script-mode, it will start pressing keys instead of you! Not all, of course, but the most functional: the Windows key is replaced by the symbol #, Alt — !, Control — ^, Shift — +. And Tab, Enter, Up, Down, Left, Right and Backspace are enough to hide in curly brackets. Russian Russian. Thus, for example, the word the word (written, note, in Russian) can be colored letter by letter: I'm starting a new expression with the name red (scripts with Russian names are sometimes buggy) ^{Left}+{Right}^c<span style=»font-color:{#}f0f;»>^v</span>, I write the word «word», I write with a space red and press Tab (this is how I distinguish script replacements from text ones) — and red is spelled out for the first letter. Try to handle the rest yourself.