![]() ![]() The book examines how musical experience creates encounters with other people that leads to ethical responsibilities. My book, Music and Ethical Responsibility, is published by Cambridge University Press. I am Professor of Music and Humanities at Quest University Canada in Squamish, British Columbia. There is much more information on the websites of the applications, but I've tried to show a couple ways I have found these apps useful. You can also trigger Liquid without selecting anything and pressing option-space and typing your own text. For example, I could highlight the text of an entire article or book and have Liquid copy all the sentences with a specific word or phrase – very handy. What I think might be top use is for researchers is the 'copy sentences with' option. You can also translate the text to/from just about any language, which I use fairly often (despite the inelegance of internet translation). You can search for the text in google, or set up custom searches (I have one for google scholar and one for the amazon kindle store). Then you can do all sorts of things with that text through easy keyboard shortcuts. ![]() Liquid works by selecting text and triggering with cmd-shift-2. Liquid duplicates some of what Popclip does, and unless you need the extras you might find Popclip enough for you. Between the extensions listed on the popclip website and Brett Terpstra's popclip extensions, there are all sorts of useful things for writing in markdown, like quickly adding the first link google fetches (like I just did with to make the link on the word 'markdown'), making lists, wrapping selected text in quotes or asterisks, or indenting or outdenting the selection. There are options to add reminders, open a link, send an email, and other helpful actions. There are some options baked in, but where it really shines is when you add popclip extensions. The menu shows different things you can do with the text. When you select text in any application, a pop up menu comes up much like you find in ios. Both allow you to do different things with selected text, and both are under $5. If you know of one that exists, by all means leave a comment.I've recently started using two little applications on Mac OS X that I have already found quite helpful: PopClip and Liquid. It’s hoped though that once the Wayland engine gets into wide spread use tools similar to Pantherbar or PopClip will become available on Linux. As I understand it, the current graphics engine makes this kind of extension difficult. To my knowledge there is no similar extension on the Linux platform, at least for the Ubuntu based distros I tend to use. I just like the tools and was happy to pay for them. ![]() You can try it for free, and if you decide to buy the price is very reasonable.ĭo note that this, nor the PopClip blog post, are paid posts in anyway. With its rich set of extensions, you can save a lot of time performing common tasks. Pantherbar is a useful addition to your Windows toolkit. The majority of the time I’m going to put the corrected text where I had selected, so this saves a few steps. Pantherbar immediately pastes the new text in. PopClip copies the modified text to the clipboard. Note this is a little different than the behavior of PopClip on macOS. ![]() As you can see, the text is reversed immediately, replacing what had been selected. ![]()
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