John Hartman
Member
Just getting started with OBS (26.1.1 64-bit Windows 10)
I want to make shortcuts to select scenes, and need them to control an image slide-show source, since there seems to be no other way to manually change slides. I set the option so hotkeys only work when OBS is in focus, since I don't need or want global access.
But how do I avoid picking a hotkey that conflicts with an OBJ shortcut? Control-key combinations are shown on the menus, but scattered so they are a pain to hunt for.
Even more basic: a tutorial suggests using the number keys for scene. I figure "great - no conflict with menu shortcuts." BUT, if I assign "1" as a shortcut to a scene and then type a 1 somewhere else - say to name or rename a source - the hotkey fires, and the scene changes, as well as the name I was typing.
So how do you pick a hotkey without worrying that it will have some other effect as well as what you intended?
I want to make shortcuts to select scenes, and need them to control an image slide-show source, since there seems to be no other way to manually change slides. I set the option so hotkeys only work when OBS is in focus, since I don't need or want global access.
But how do I avoid picking a hotkey that conflicts with an OBJ shortcut? Control-key combinations are shown on the menus, but scattered so they are a pain to hunt for.
Even more basic: a tutorial suggests using the number keys for scene. I figure "great - no conflict with menu shortcuts." BUT, if I assign "1" as a shortcut to a scene and then type a 1 somewhere else - say to name or rename a source - the hotkey fires, and the scene changes, as well as the name I was typing.
So how do you pick a hotkey without worrying that it will have some other effect as well as what you intended?