To do this Press this Open a new window ⌘ + N Open a new tab ⌘ + T Open a new window in incognito mode ⌘ + Shift + N Open a file from your computer in Google Chrome Press ⌘ + O, then select a file Open the link in a new tab in the background Press ⌘ and click a link Open the link in a new tab and switches to the newly opened tab Press ⌘ + Shift and click a link Open the link in a new window Press Shift and click a link Reopen the last tab you've closed. To do this Press this Print your current page ⌘ + P Open the Page Setup dialog ⌘ + Shift + P Save your current page ⌘ + S Email your current page ⌘ + Shift + I Reload your current page ⌘ + R Open the find bar ⌘ + F Find the next match for your input in the find bar ⌘ + G Find the previous match for your input in the find bar ⌘ + Shift + G or Shift + Enter Use selection for find ⌘ + E Jump to selection ⌘ + J Download the target of the link Press Option and click a link Open your page in full-screen mode.
On Lubuntu, backspace only works if the page doesn't have any input fields. Otherwise, even if the input field doesn't have the focus, backspace goes to the input field.
Press ⌘-Shift-F again to exit full-screen ⌘ + Ctrl + F Enlarge everything on the page ⌘ + Plus sign Make everything on the page smaller ⌘ + Minus sign Return everything on the page to normal size ⌘ + 0 Open your home page in your current tab ⌘ + Shift + H Scroll down the web page Space bar Search the web ⌘ + Option + F Address Bar.
@ElijahLynn Try Alt+D instead of Ctrl+L to jump to the address bar. It's a little more widely implemented: works in major browsers, Windows Explorer, KDE/Gnome, and in may other programs with address/nav bars. The best part is that this leaves Ctrl+L free to clear the web console like in most terminals (although newer browser versions often make you hit Ctrl+Shift+L).
The main downside is it doesn't generally work on Mac, though Cmd+L does, so Mac users stick with that I guess. – Mar 27 '17 at 17:30. I've had this exact same use case, and I'm surprised there isn't a simple shortcut for it. I've done some research, and it seems there are a few options:.
Use command + option + J to toggle the console off. This will bring focus back to the web page. Then, hitting command + option + J again will open the console and direct the focus there once again. This is probably not the best way since there is a little bit of on each toggle.
Open Dev Tools in separate window. You can find this by clicking the three dots in the top right corner of the dev tools, and then you can find a button for undocking the tools into a separate window. Then, to toggle focus between the web page and console, you can hit command + `. The from @Sangdol is a great solution for switching focus from the console to the web page.
This is probably the fastest and best way of doing this once it's set up. The only thing I'd like to add is how to switch focus back to the console.
For this, you can hit command + shift + C twice (hitting it only one will successfully switch the focus, but will leave the browser in 'Inspect Element' mode). I've found that if the focus on the webpage is in a text box, you may have to hit Esc first before hitting command + shift + C.