Distros with hotkeys exactly the same as window$

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I'm new to Linux & while I don't like M$, I hate having to memorize all sets of different hotkeys for the same function. So, are there distros that have those same hotkeys? Or if there's no such distro, is there any app or soft that completely remap the hotkeys with just some clicks?



Thank you in advance!







share|improve this question















  • 1




    Almost all DEs have some way of defining keybindings.
    – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
    May 9 at 11:05






  • 1




    I'm aware of that. For general users, especially those who have just migrated from window$, having to bind hundreds of hotkeys manually is a deal breaker.
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:07






  • 1




    Downvoting someone moving into Linux is productive because... Complete the sentence. What's wrong with you, people?
    – ajeh
    May 9 at 15:28










  • While migrating thousands is of course a deal breaker, a vast majority of the standard ones are present on all major Linux systems by default. Alt-F4 still closes a window, F11 still goes full screen (that's an application hotkey though, not a Windows one), etc. The only big ones that are typically missing are the ones that use the 'Windows' key (referred to as the 'Super' key on Linux), and most people only use a small handful of those.
    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    May 9 at 19:07














up vote
-1
down vote

favorite












I'm new to Linux & while I don't like M$, I hate having to memorize all sets of different hotkeys for the same function. So, are there distros that have those same hotkeys? Or if there's no such distro, is there any app or soft that completely remap the hotkeys with just some clicks?



Thank you in advance!







share|improve this question















  • 1




    Almost all DEs have some way of defining keybindings.
    – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
    May 9 at 11:05






  • 1




    I'm aware of that. For general users, especially those who have just migrated from window$, having to bind hundreds of hotkeys manually is a deal breaker.
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:07






  • 1




    Downvoting someone moving into Linux is productive because... Complete the sentence. What's wrong with you, people?
    – ajeh
    May 9 at 15:28










  • While migrating thousands is of course a deal breaker, a vast majority of the standard ones are present on all major Linux systems by default. Alt-F4 still closes a window, F11 still goes full screen (that's an application hotkey though, not a Windows one), etc. The only big ones that are typically missing are the ones that use the 'Windows' key (referred to as the 'Super' key on Linux), and most people only use a small handful of those.
    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    May 9 at 19:07












up vote
-1
down vote

favorite









up vote
-1
down vote

favorite











I'm new to Linux & while I don't like M$, I hate having to memorize all sets of different hotkeys for the same function. So, are there distros that have those same hotkeys? Or if there's no such distro, is there any app or soft that completely remap the hotkeys with just some clicks?



Thank you in advance!







share|improve this question











I'm new to Linux & while I don't like M$, I hate having to memorize all sets of different hotkeys for the same function. So, are there distros that have those same hotkeys? Or if there's no such distro, is there any app or soft that completely remap the hotkeys with just some clicks?



Thank you in advance!









share|improve this question










share|improve this question




share|improve this question









asked May 9 at 11:04









12tn2

6




6







  • 1




    Almost all DEs have some way of defining keybindings.
    – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
    May 9 at 11:05






  • 1




    I'm aware of that. For general users, especially those who have just migrated from window$, having to bind hundreds of hotkeys manually is a deal breaker.
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:07






  • 1




    Downvoting someone moving into Linux is productive because... Complete the sentence. What's wrong with you, people?
    – ajeh
    May 9 at 15:28










  • While migrating thousands is of course a deal breaker, a vast majority of the standard ones are present on all major Linux systems by default. Alt-F4 still closes a window, F11 still goes full screen (that's an application hotkey though, not a Windows one), etc. The only big ones that are typically missing are the ones that use the 'Windows' key (referred to as the 'Super' key on Linux), and most people only use a small handful of those.
    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    May 9 at 19:07












  • 1




    Almost all DEs have some way of defining keybindings.
    – Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
    May 9 at 11:05






  • 1




    I'm aware of that. For general users, especially those who have just migrated from window$, having to bind hundreds of hotkeys manually is a deal breaker.
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:07






  • 1




    Downvoting someone moving into Linux is productive because... Complete the sentence. What's wrong with you, people?
    – ajeh
    May 9 at 15:28










  • While migrating thousands is of course a deal breaker, a vast majority of the standard ones are present on all major Linux systems by default. Alt-F4 still closes a window, F11 still goes full screen (that's an application hotkey though, not a Windows one), etc. The only big ones that are typically missing are the ones that use the 'Windows' key (referred to as the 'Super' key on Linux), and most people only use a small handful of those.
    – Austin Hemmelgarn
    May 9 at 19:07







1




1




Almost all DEs have some way of defining keybindings.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 9 at 11:05




Almost all DEs have some way of defining keybindings.
– Ignacio Vazquez-Abrams
May 9 at 11:05




1




1




I'm aware of that. For general users, especially those who have just migrated from window$, having to bind hundreds of hotkeys manually is a deal breaker.
– 12tn2
May 9 at 14:07




I'm aware of that. For general users, especially those who have just migrated from window$, having to bind hundreds of hotkeys manually is a deal breaker.
– 12tn2
May 9 at 14:07




1




1




Downvoting someone moving into Linux is productive because... Complete the sentence. What's wrong with you, people?
– ajeh
May 9 at 15:28




Downvoting someone moving into Linux is productive because... Complete the sentence. What's wrong with you, people?
– ajeh
May 9 at 15:28












While migrating thousands is of course a deal breaker, a vast majority of the standard ones are present on all major Linux systems by default. Alt-F4 still closes a window, F11 still goes full screen (that's an application hotkey though, not a Windows one), etc. The only big ones that are typically missing are the ones that use the 'Windows' key (referred to as the 'Super' key on Linux), and most people only use a small handful of those.
– Austin Hemmelgarn
May 9 at 19:07




While migrating thousands is of course a deal breaker, a vast majority of the standard ones are present on all major Linux systems by default. Alt-F4 still closes a window, F11 still goes full screen (that's an application hotkey though, not a Windows one), etc. The only big ones that are typically missing are the ones that use the 'Windows' key (referred to as the 'Super' key on Linux), and most people only use a small handful of those.
– Austin Hemmelgarn
May 9 at 19:07










1 Answer
1






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1
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Ubuntu Linux is the solution for you, because it supports almost every keyboard shortcuts like Win+L , Win(Called Dock in Linux), Alt+F4 etc.. and you can also assign shortcut keys manually.



This link may help you:-
https://help.ubuntu.com/stable/ubuntu-help/keyboard-shortcuts-set.html






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    I heard that ZorinOS tries to imitate windows to the extreme. Does it do so with the hotkeys also?
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:19










  • please take a look at this link:_ lnag.sourceforge.net/lnag_html/node5.html
    – dx.hmnt
    Jun 4 at 7:22










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes








up vote
1
down vote













Ubuntu Linux is the solution for you, because it supports almost every keyboard shortcuts like Win+L , Win(Called Dock in Linux), Alt+F4 etc.. and you can also assign shortcut keys manually.



This link may help you:-
https://help.ubuntu.com/stable/ubuntu-help/keyboard-shortcuts-set.html






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    I heard that ZorinOS tries to imitate windows to the extreme. Does it do so with the hotkeys also?
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:19










  • please take a look at this link:_ lnag.sourceforge.net/lnag_html/node5.html
    – dx.hmnt
    Jun 4 at 7:22














up vote
1
down vote













Ubuntu Linux is the solution for you, because it supports almost every keyboard shortcuts like Win+L , Win(Called Dock in Linux), Alt+F4 etc.. and you can also assign shortcut keys manually.



This link may help you:-
https://help.ubuntu.com/stable/ubuntu-help/keyboard-shortcuts-set.html






share|improve this answer

















  • 1




    I heard that ZorinOS tries to imitate windows to the extreme. Does it do so with the hotkeys also?
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:19










  • please take a look at this link:_ lnag.sourceforge.net/lnag_html/node5.html
    – dx.hmnt
    Jun 4 at 7:22












up vote
1
down vote










up vote
1
down vote









Ubuntu Linux is the solution for you, because it supports almost every keyboard shortcuts like Win+L , Win(Called Dock in Linux), Alt+F4 etc.. and you can also assign shortcut keys manually.



This link may help you:-
https://help.ubuntu.com/stable/ubuntu-help/keyboard-shortcuts-set.html






share|improve this answer













Ubuntu Linux is the solution for you, because it supports almost every keyboard shortcuts like Win+L , Win(Called Dock in Linux), Alt+F4 etc.. and you can also assign shortcut keys manually.



This link may help you:-
https://help.ubuntu.com/stable/ubuntu-help/keyboard-shortcuts-set.html







share|improve this answer













share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer











answered May 9 at 12:31









dx.hmnt

318




318







  • 1




    I heard that ZorinOS tries to imitate windows to the extreme. Does it do so with the hotkeys also?
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:19










  • please take a look at this link:_ lnag.sourceforge.net/lnag_html/node5.html
    – dx.hmnt
    Jun 4 at 7:22












  • 1




    I heard that ZorinOS tries to imitate windows to the extreme. Does it do so with the hotkeys also?
    – 12tn2
    May 9 at 14:19










  • please take a look at this link:_ lnag.sourceforge.net/lnag_html/node5.html
    – dx.hmnt
    Jun 4 at 7:22







1




1




I heard that ZorinOS tries to imitate windows to the extreme. Does it do so with the hotkeys also?
– 12tn2
May 9 at 14:19




I heard that ZorinOS tries to imitate windows to the extreme. Does it do so with the hotkeys also?
– 12tn2
May 9 at 14:19












please take a look at this link:_ lnag.sourceforge.net/lnag_html/node5.html
– dx.hmnt
Jun 4 at 7:22




please take a look at this link:_ lnag.sourceforge.net/lnag_html/node5.html
– dx.hmnt
Jun 4 at 7:22












 

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