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Ahk f2
Ahk f2









ahk f2 ahk f2

So you’ve just typed something into Powerscribe and you’re still looking at the images and want to switch to that liver window. AHK will let you change the window even when the Powerscribe window is active. But let’s say your PACS does allow it, like most. If your PACS does not allow customizable shortcuts, you can use AHK to re-map those keys to your liking. In the PACS I’ve seen, this is usually done through the NUM-pad. Global windowing – Pretty much all PACS allow you to change the window settings for a CT (lungs, bones, soft tissue, liver, etc…) with keyboard shortcuts. Ah yes, the great airline hubs of Saskatchewan, Tegucigalpa, Honduras, & the Sahara Note that you could make shortcuts to interact with the computer (a la Win-D to minimize all), but that’s outside our scope. So for our purposes here, we’ll parse the global shortcuts into those for Powerscribe and those for PACS. On my workstation, the imaging computer only has Powerscribe and our PACS (Agfa) – there is no browser or other software. In other words, no alt-tabbing, no moving the mouse to the other application and clicking it, no moving the mouse to the taskbar and clicking it. Simply, this lets you do stuff in one application even if another application is currently in focus (active) without manually switching over to that first application. The idea here is to assign tasks to keyboard shortcuts but have those tasks be agnostic to the active application.

ahk f2

If you decide to try AutoHotkey for one thing alone, make it global hotkeys.











Ahk f2