![]() Otherwise the media keys (most likely at the top of your keyboard) will still control playback. ![]() Very important: in Settings > Key Bindings, you must also uncheck the Use system volume control checkbox and then restart IINA for it to take effect. (Interestingly, I just noticed there are a few which cannot be disabled or customized, but they all require Command held down and some require additional modifiers, so they should be very unlikely to activate by mistake. Using an empty configuration should work to disable almost all keyboard shortcuts. If I understand properly, you created an empty Key Bindings configuration and were using that? IINA does not support mpv "profiles". the other top players aren't used because, while they behave correctly regarding shortcuts, they have other issues. IINA is therefore useless and is uninstalled, switched to elmedia player since it actually obeys user settings to the letter. without knowing what the shortcut was, it can't be undone and there's no point in uninstalling and reinstalling as the cat will continue walking on the keyboard. 2 days later, no power on the planet has been able to restore sound. no audio as whatever the shortcut, the app doesn't reset on launch which is potentially another bug. nothing in the audio menu indicates that anything else about sound has been changed and the correct audio track is still selected. volume is manually reset to 100%, mute is verified to be off but is cycled just to be sure. as expected, the cat walks on the keyboard, and audio stops working. all other actions can be performed with a mouse which the cat's not interested in sitting on. to avoid this, the user duplicates a profile and removes all shortcuts except for 3: frame step forward, frame step backward, pause/unpause. cats always walk on the keyboard firing off unknown commands in the active app. all video players i ever used perform as specified, but verify by downloading some of the most used like vlc, elmedia player, kmplayer. i haven't tried commenting shortcuts out because a conf file has a comment that states it's baked in, so there'd be no point. conf files to avoid the above problem causes the app to crash on startup. if a profile shipped with the app can still override the user and perform actions very specifically removed, then shortcut customisation has no reason for existing. there's a reason there's a duplicate profile facility, and removing individual shortcuts within the profile. ![]() in the absence of specified action, or no profile at all, ignore all shortcuts but keep running otherwise it's just madness. There’s a little app that gives you control over showing/hiding the macOS mouse cursor named Cursorcerer.The app must perform only the commands set out in the specifically user-chosen shortcut profile, and the individual shortcuts therein and nothing more.In my case this caused the macOS mouse cursor to disappear in fullscreen video playback. ![]()
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