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Mac 101: taming Safari toolbars with shortcut keys

As you've probably noticed, there are suddenly a lot of Safari Extensions floating around, thanks to the new features in Safari 5. PimpMySafari is ramping back up, and the Safari Extensions Tumblog is doing a great job of keeping track of all of them. I'm going to wait until the dust settles, the cream rises, and several other clichés come to pass before I dig in and start featuring my favorites. I do, however, want to offer a quick tip for dealing with Extensions that add toolbars.

Most of the Extensions I've tried that add a toolbar to Safari don't make it easy to show and hide it (and I don't really need every extension I install polling my keyboard, anyway). Aside from my url bar, my bookmarks bar, and my tabs, there's no toolbar in the world that I want to have open all the time. What is this, Firefox? Fortunately, there's a simple way to add shortcuts to show toolbars when they're useful, and hide them when they're irrelevant.

It's the same tip we featured back in 2008, but things have moved a little. In System Preferences, load the Keyboard pane and choose the Keyboard Shortcuts tab. If you have a lot of Services and/or Applications installed, there's sometimes a delay (read: SPOD) before it lets you get down to it. It's ok, I'll wait.

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Ok, next we open up the Application Shortcuts menu on the left side of the window. Once that's selected, pressing the plus (+) button under the right panel will let us define a new shortcut. Press it, and then choose Safari from the Application drop-down. Here's the only mildly tricky part: the Menu Title field has to exactly match the text of the menu item you want to add a shortcut for. In the case of toolbar extensions, each one added is going to have a Hide/Show menu item under the View menu. Take, for example, the Regexp Search extension. It adds a regex-based, "Find in page" search bar to Safari, accompanied by a "Hide Regexp Toolbar Bar" menu item. That's what I typed in for my first shortcut item, and then assigned Command-Option-R to it. Next, I added a second shortcut, using the same hotkey, for the menu item "Show Regexp Toolbar Bar." The two menu items alternate, so using the same hotkey effectively creates a toggle.

Quick tips: If I'm adding more than one shortcut, I like to grab quick screenshots of the app's menus in Skitch (or just with Command-Shift-3 or 4) and keep it visible so I don't have to keep switching to verify capitalization, ellipses, et cetera. Speaking of, the ellipses (...) is not three periods, it's a special character you can type by pressing Option-; (semicolon). That's handy for a lot of menu items you might want to add shortcuts to.

I know there are only so many keys, and so much space in muscle memory for remembering seldom-used key combinations, but fortunately there aren't an overwhelming number of really useful toolbars to contend with, yet. I hope this makes the ones you do find useful even handier.