Thread: pgAdmin 1.18.1 - Ctrl-F hotkey launches Database Designer where Find&Replace was desired
pgAdmin 1.18.1 - Ctrl-F hotkey launches Database Designer where Find&Replace was desired
From
jashworth
Date:
From the main pgAdmin window (Object brower tree on left, tabbed-pane in upper-right, and SQL pane in lower-right), I'm used to being able to click in the SQL pane and hit Ctrl-F to search for a particular column name. However, after recently upgrading to openSUSE 13.2, my pgAdmin version has changed (to 1.18.1) and the behavior is different in the newew version. Now, from the main screen, Ctrl-F is bound to the Database Designer function, and the keystroke launches that instead of the Find and Replace dialog. Could that function be bound to a different hotkey to restore the searching capability? -- View this message in context: http://postgresql.nabble.com/pgAdmin-1-18-1-Ctrl-F-hotkey-launches-Database-Designer-where-Find-Replace-was-desired-tp5827401.html Sent from the PostgreSQL - pgadmin support mailing list archive at Nabble.com.
Re: pgAdmin 1.18.1 - Ctrl-F hotkey launches Database Designer where Find&Replace was desired
From
Dave Page
Date:
On Tue, Nov 18, 2014 at 5:55 PM, jashworth <jay.ashworth@gmail.com> wrote: > From the main pgAdmin window (Object brower tree on left, tabbed-pane in > upper-right, and SQL pane in lower-right), I'm used to being able to click > in the SQL pane and hit Ctrl-F to search for a particular column name. > However, after recently upgrading to openSUSE 13.2, my pgAdmin version has > changed (to 1.18.1) and the behavior is different in the newew version. > Now, from the main screen, Ctrl-F is bound to the Database Designer > function, and the keystroke launches that instead of the Find and Replace > dialog. > > Could that function be bound to a different hotkey to restore the searching > capability? The database designer is highly experimental and not particularly stable, and therefore disabled in the build by default. You should petition the maintainers of the openSUSE packages to leave it off, as intended. -- Dave Page Blog: http://pgsnake.blogspot.com Twitter: @pgsnake EnterpriseDB UK: http://www.enterprisedb.com The Enterprise PostgreSQL Company