![]() Plus, if you simply Ctrl+Shift+Arrow without thinking, 50% of the time you'll have pressed them in the wrong order. Needless to say, this means that you cannot Ctrl+Arrow to the desired position, add Shift, and select by words from there. If you want to select by words, you had better press Shift, Ctrl, Arrow. Ctrl+Shift+Arrows has an extremely annoying OS-wide bug: if you press Ctrl, then Shift, then Arrow, you will get the same as Ctrl+Arrow. As already mentioned, there is no Insert or Delete key, so forget about Ctrl+Ins, Shift+Ins and Shift+Del.Ĭtrl+Arrows usually work to jump a word at a time. Prepare to either use Tab a lot, or to touch the controls you need.Ĭtrl+C, Ctrl+V and Ctrl+X work everywhere I tried them, which is great. Arrow keys also generally work for changing UI focus, even in third-party apps.Īlt+shortcuts are non-existent on Android. Enter often does the same as Tab in various built-in dialogs. Tab generally works to focus the next UI control. Plus, I see no reason why Search+Tab couldn't double up as Alt+Tab. Quite a wasted opportunity in my opinion. The Search key (located where the left Alt would be found on traditional keyboards) doesn't do anything in most applications. ![]() To switch between two apps, get ready to Alt+Tab+Tab. Secondly, pressing Alt+Tab once doesn't switch applications it just shows the switch UI with the current application selected. Firstly, the only Alt on the hardware keyboard is the right Alt. There is a dedicated key to turn the touch pad on/off, but having to turn it on/off constantly is a huge pain. Every time you press Space, you also tap the mouse. It's basically impossible to type if you leave the touch pad enabled. It works pretty intuitively it feels just like using Escape on Windows PCs. The Escape key has been re-branded as the "return" key. What you get in return is a bunch of dedicated keys for things like volume, brightness and such, which is really rather convenient. I couldn't possibly tolerate that on a Windows machine, but it's fine on Android. All the applications are new and none rely on F-keys. There are no F-keys, but I found this to be no big deal. But omitting Delete is absolutely unforgivable. Insert has certainly fallen into disuse lately – in no small part due to how most UIs that use it for insert/overwrite mode utterly fail in making it obvious that you can switch modes by pressing Insert, or especially how to change it back if you've pressed Insert by accident. There are no keys for Delete or Insert at all. Unfortunately, this isn't exactly unusual for laptop keyboards, but this also means you might already know what this feels like, and hence whether this is a problem for you personally. I have to press Fn+Arrow for these, which adds up for things like Ctrl+Shift+Home. I use these keys a lot, so this is a huge drawback. There are no dedicated Page up/Page down/Home/End keys. The arrow keys are too small for true comfort, but still better than 90% of modern laptops, which have halved their height. The keys are fairly usable for touch typing, just large enough to be acceptable (my hands are average-sized). I'll try to avoid repeating things that the average review already mentions. Not the kind of thing most reviews mention, nor indeed the kind of thing most people care about. I thought I'll post a few things about how this works in practice, from the perspective of a keyboard addict. This unrivaled attention to detail is what makes ASUS Transformer Pro one the best 2-in-1 laptops you can buy.I'm playing with an ASUS Transformer tablet, which is interesting in that it has a hardware keyboard which can be unplugged. It's also an incredibly tough material, helping protect the beautiful surface of ASUS Transformer Pro from everyday scuffs and scratches. ![]() This premium material allows us to make ASUS Transformer Pro incredibly thin and light - it weighs under 810g and is just 8.85mm thin - without sacrificing strength or rigidity. When you look at ASUS Transformer Pro, you're witnessing a design masterpiece, with a gorgeously sleek tablet carefully crafted from aluminum-magnesium alloy. ASUS Transformer Pro is much more than just a 2-in-1 laptop - it's a mobile masterpiece.Ĭraftsmanship Premium-grade metal. Be productive with ASUS Universal Dock, and be creative with ASUS Pen. It's unbelievably powerful, amazingly convenient - and also incredibly expandable. ASUS Transformer Pro was designed with one purpose in mind: to give you performance you never thought possible in a detachable 2-in-1. ![]()
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