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What is the easiest/best way to do this? And even if not all three remappings are possible, I’d like to do even just one or two of the remappings.
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I want the backslash key (third from top on right edge) to be remapped as a “forward delete” key I want the Caps Lock key to be remapped to become an extra “return/enter” key I want the “fn” key (bottom left of keyboard) to no longer be the “function” key but be remapped to be an extra “delete” or “backspace” key
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And as an extra, a picked up a little six-key keypad (usually intended for Osu) that also has hot-swap switches, and I've been fiddling with programming that for extra macros like muting/unmuting in Zoom & Webex.How to remap specific keys on MacBook keyboard in Big Sur 11.1? Using a 2015 12-inch MacBook Retina running Big Sur 11.1. I also miss having programmable macro keys, but I worked around it by using Karabiner to convert the NumLock key (which does nothing on Mac OS) to a Hyper key so that I can use that for key combos across the keyboard. It doesn't look wonderful, but it's pretty effective: I can now find the arrow keys pretty consistently without looking down, and I can find the middle of the numeric keypad thanks to the scooped 5 key in the center. At the moment, the solution is to use SA-profile keycaps on those keys, which are much taller than the default keycaps. That's no longer the case, so I had to get creative. I'm used to TKL-style keyboards where the arrow keys or special modifiers up top are easy to find by touch because they're surrounded by a gap. On the down side, the absolutely uniform layout of the keys definitely throws my fingers for a loop. Once I got the default switches out (the tolerance in the aluminum frame is pretty tight, so getting the default switches out requires a really firm tug!), swapping switches on a whim is pretty easy, so I'm looking forward to playing with some other switches as we go.
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I absolutely love the clickiness, and the sound with the aluminum frame and the default keycaps is really solid. Weirdly, having the outer keys on a linear switch is pretty comfortable, probably because those are often hit with weaker fingers or odd angles, so having a light linear reduces finger fatigue. I bought it with Gateron Reds (linear) and then swapped the core keys (alphanumerics, keypad) to Kailh Box Whites because I really like the clickiness.
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It's heavy and solid, compact enough that I can have a numeric keypad without feeling like my trackball is off to the right somewhere in Narnia, and the default keycaps and lighting are (to me) really classy and good-looking. Switched recently to a Keychron K4 (v2), the aluminum/hot-swap model.
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