In my case, anyway, this does not really help. I do a lot of technical documentation in Evernote. Ideally, I want to be able to very rapidly switch from my normal font to a fixed-width, monospace font when entering commands and formatting the output of commands. It is currently extremely cumbersome to do this. A simple "typewriter" button would be fantastic (with a keyboard shortcut, of course), allowing one to switch back and forth between one's default font, and a monospace font.

+1 for this feature. I paste a lot of code and need the ability to quickly change such blocks to fixed width. The current process is a bit cumbersome so any keyboard shortcut or even a shortcut menu with recently used fonts would save a lot of pain.


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From now on, every time you want to work on this type of job, instead of creating a new note, import your template to a new note, which should now have your new markup. I'm not sure what the "preview/display" window in EN is capable of, is it WebKit and can display all as well as Safari, or did they write their own mini browser? You will have to test what if any, or all, of the html and css that is current for today. You can probably just drag and drop or 2x click the enex file and it will auto import. Or you could make little applescripts that are connected to keyboard shortcuts so you don't have to leave the app. It would be fast enough I doubt you could tell it was creating from template or a new note.

For your font issue, That you can't get to the font selector via keyboard is terrible. The entire selection merely needs to be able to be accessed via the menu system and then we would add our own keyboard commands, but a monospace button with shortcut would be nice.

You can exclude an action from all apps but one, or include it to all apps but one, or any combination thereof, or run only when a certain app is activated, trigger by keyboard command, time, date, temperature sensors, alerts, pretty much anything your mac does, KM can grab ahold of it. It has a full blown web admin, a large community of pre-made scripts that you just double click and they will be installed in a simple folder in Application Support. Technical Support is great aside from one issue I have had for going on 8+ years or more now, in that sometimes KM will just go deaf. In that amount of time I have had multiple different computers, various OS's, reinstalls, clean OS reinstalls, etc. I have never been able to trigger this issue on demand, it just happens at random.

As a side note, if you don't want to pay for an app that can launch other apps via keyboard, there is an app that lets you define keyboard commands by naming a file, usually a script, in a special way, so that it can be parsed and then run via the keyboard. Fast Scripts I believe it is called. But seriously, I have not met a person who has bought KM that has regretted it. FastScritps has limitations that will kick in and you will end up paying, so get KM if you are going to pay, if you just want to play, try fastScripts or KM, which I believe has a 30 day trial/demo

RaVbaker's workaround above looks like it has potential, but I must be missing something - how do I know what command to type in the "Menu Title" box? Specifically I'm trying to get keyboard shortcuts for changing colour. I'm studying Chinese in notes where I highlight specific words in different colours, so I can easily find the Chinese / pinyin / translation by having that term in the same colour, so I've got blue words in otherwise-black text, for example.

Here it is nearly six years after this post and it pains me to say that there still isn't a native way to use a keyboard shortcut to change the font quickly, let alone have there be native markdown support (aside from third party tools like Marxico). I have been a dedicated paying Evernote user for well over a decade and while I still use it for general note-taking I am growing weary of having to get used to the fact that the seemingly obvious features you'd expect in an omnibus notebook tool which users repeatedly ask for are simply getting ignored. The UI continues to be buggy due to what appears to be the way the Evernote editor uses unprintable characters to define formatting and how your prompt can get "ahead" or "behind" this formatting unpredictably. This becomes more painfully apparently when you edit a document with the Web, MacOS and iOS clients and find just how badly jumbled a bullet or numbered lists can become or how frustrating it is that you cannot change the arbitrary line spacing that might get permanently injected into you Evernote document formatting if are not careful and happen to cut and paste from a document that includes them. (The only way to strip this out is to revert the document to plain text and lose all of its formatting as using Simplify Formatting upon some selected text doesn't resolve these problems by and large.) In short, Evernote document formatting seems to be deliberately opaque for the sake of seeming "user friendly" at the expense of usability and predictable formatting behavior across Evernote editors resulting in some very frustrating problems and UI shortcomings, namely the one that is brought up in this post which... again... has not been addressed.

I know this is a very old post, but I'm having the same problem as everyone else: I want a simple shortcut to change the font of selected text, for when I'm adding code to my notes. Just wondering if you could be specific with how to set keyboard shortcuts for fonts on a Mac. I'm using MacOS Big Sur 11.6, and nowhere in the Shortcuts tab can I find anything about setting fonts. I can create an Evernote-specific shortcut, but I don't know what to use for the Menu Title

If I understand correctly, if I want to use a dingbat font it is just a trial and error of pushing every key with all its modifiers until I happen to hit on the right one. That's ridiculous. They have rendered some fonts useless. Does that hold true is MS Office as well?

It is best not to use an old dingbat font where the symbols are mapped to Latin so they can be made from the keyboard. There is no guarantee that anyone will see your dingbat instead of the Latin. Instead you use the Unicode dingbat fonts supplied with OS X, which you access via the Character Viewer and can only be seen as a dingbat.

What I want to do is to be able to type symbols from my keyboard using any font that has symbols or non-alphabet characters. You were good enough to show dingbats in your response as an example of what I want to type. In the past Apple had Key Caps, which allowed you to select a font, and it then showed what each key on the keyboard typed in that font. That's what I am trying to do; select a font, and see what each key on the keyboard types in that font.

If you use a non-Unicode font which lets you type different symbols from the US keyboard, there is no way to have Keyboard Viewer show you that. But I think there are some apps like PopChar and Ultra Character Map will let you read off the key combos for such fonts.

To add to Tom's excellent info. PopChar in its current form is unusable. At least if you're using non Unicode fonts, it is. You cannot in any way make it show you glyphs in a font that do not have Unicode values assigned to them, and that includes many Unicode fonts! As an example, here's Adobe's Caslon Pro Italic from Font Folio 11. It's a Unicode, OpenType font:

Using the Character Viewer isn't a great choice. Yes, you can choose Dingbats to see all dingbats, but that's a concatenation of all dingbat glyphs. As I recall, it doesn't even tell you what font a dingbat is in when you select it. So if you have a half dozen or more such fonts open, you need to have all of them available all the time in order to be sure the one you chose is used in the document. Which means you also have to send every possible font that may include a dingbat you used to the printer to make sure they have it.

Had an interesting discussion with Chris Cox on Adobe's forums. The new CC apps have done away with writing resource forks. In API documents, Apple has deprecated them. So it's entirely possible the Mac OS in the future could be moving to a single data structure like Windows. Which means all old legacy Mac TrueType suitcase fonts, and all Type 1 PostScript fonts would be dead since all of their data is in the resource fork.

That being said, I think I have solved my problem with your help. In MS word I went to Insert Symbols-advanced symbols and there all the fonts were accessible. I selected wingdings, selected the symbol I wanted, clicked insert and there it was on my document. I have created a master document of symbols I would like to use and then in the future it is just a matter of copy and paste. I can add to my master doc whenever I have a need. It's a bit cubersome but it works for this old guy.

There used to be an application called FontBook (not the same FontBook that comes with OS X, which is confusing) that allowed you to print out sheets that showed you what would happen if you typed a, A, opt-a, and opt-A in any given font. It was incredibly useful for symbol fonts and other wingdings fonts, etc. Or any font when you wanted to know how to type  in something (shift-option-K). 2351a5e196

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