Christian
Christian4 min read

GeekBye Keyboard Shortcuts: Master the App in 60 Seconds

Three shortcuts cover ninety percent of what you do in GeekBye. Memorize those, learn the Mac Fn-key gotcha, swap presets when an IDE steals a combo, and you never need a mouse again.

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GeekBye Keyboard Shortcuts: Master the App in 60 Seconds

GeekBye is keyboard-first. The mouse exists, but if you're alt-tabbing to find your cursor every time you want to ask a question, you're doing it wrong.

Here's the muscle memory that turns the app from "let me think about how to do this" into "I just do it."

The three shortcuts that cover ninety percent

If you only learn three combos, learn these.

Cmd / Ctrl + H — Screenshot anything

Whatever's on your screen — a slide, a code snippet, a problem statement, a stack trace — Cmd + H (Mac) or Ctrl + H (Windows) drops it into GeekBye in one keystroke. No region picker, no save dialog, no copy-paste. The screenshot stays in context for follow-up questions.

This is the shortcut you'll use most. Memorize it first.

Cmd / Ctrl + Enter — Talk to GeekBye

Cmd / Ctrl + Enter opens the chat window. Once you're typing, the same combo sends the message.

It's the same key motion as "submit" in most apps — that's deliberate. The app is designed to feel like an editor, not a chat tool.

Cmd / Ctrl + Shift + \ — Start a Listen session

Cmd / Ctrl + Shift + \ flips on Listen — real-time transcription of whoever's speaking on the call, plus you. This is the shortcut you'll fumble for the first time, then never miss again.

Same combo stops the session when you're done.

The Fn key on Mac — decide once

This trips up new Mac users every time. By default, F1 through F12 on a Mac are media keys (brightness, volume, mute) — you have to hold Fn to use them as actual function keys. Some IDE shortcuts and some default app shortcuts assume the opposite.

Flip the toggle once and forget about it: System Settings → Keyboard → "Use F1, F2 etc keys as standard function keys". After that, F1F12 are function keys by default and you only need Fn for media controls. Muscle memory stays consistent across GeekBye, your editor, and the OS.

This is a Mac-only concern. On Windows, F-keys are F-keys — no toggle, no decision.

Three preset schemes — when an IDE steals your shortcuts

VSCode binds Cmd + Shift + \ to "find pair" by default. WebStorm has its own claim on it. Vim users often map \ as their leader. So does Listen.

GeekBye ships three preset schemes for exactly this reason:

  • Default — the canonical set above
  • Shift preset — every shortcut adds a Shift modifier
  • Alt preset — every shortcut uses Alt instead

Swap the whole preset in Settings → Shortcuts → Preset. The mapping between preset and action is consistent — once you've learned the shape of the shortcuts, switching schemes doesn't reset your muscle memory.

Tips for avoiding conflicts

A few things that catch real users in the first week:

  • VSCode + Listen: the editor binds Cmd + Shift + \ to a built-in command. Either rebind it in Code → Preferences → Keyboard Shortcuts, or switch GeekBye to the Alt preset.
  • Notion: heavy use of Cmd + Shift + _ and Cmd + Shift + \ for formatting. Same fix — Alt preset sidesteps both.
  • Vim users: \ is your leader key in many configs. The Alt preset removes the conflict entirely.

When in doubt, the rule is: keep your editor shortcuts as-is, change GeekBye. The preset system was built for this exact scenario.

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Free trial, Mac and Windows, no credit card. Three shortcuts, sixty seconds, you're up to speed.

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