(2011/03/24 12:11), toki wrote:"ToolsCustomizeKeyboardCTRL 1": Add the specific style you want.III.
change The CASE shortcut: (SHIFT-F3 in MS Word),"ToolsCustomizeKeyboardShift F3": Add the specific
case you want.
And if that isn't what you want to do, state specifically what you do want.Yes, you can do THAT.
But ...It switches lower case to upper case, but does not TOGGLE between
those two states.You need to assign "lowercase" (or initial caps for example) to a
different shortcut.(I hate MS Word, but at least it gives you the toggle between these
attributes - which is the convenience users (like me) are looking
for.)I have asked similar questions several times already (that was about
highlighting)Apparently, this is either technically not possible - or nobody
knows the answer.(I never got any answer and now have to live with what I perceive as
awkward workarounds)The stupid thing is, LO (or OO which I used before), comes with a
DEFAULT function ofTOGGLING between superscript (or subscript) and normal script.:
Ctrl+Shift+PIf this function **IS** available for superscript (for example), I
cannot understand why this is NOT available for attributes like
bold, highlight, upper case etc.Is there any essential difference between one font attribute and
another???(again: I did ask this question many times already)With all due respect, but I think
this is a really stupid/annoying
behavior.Thomas
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