Unbind (Slash Command): Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
imported>Thirty7 (historical) mNo edit summary |
No edit summary |
||
(One intermediate revision by the same user not shown) | |||
Line 7: | Line 7: | ||
'''/unbind''' removes a key binding and resets the key's action back to its [[Default Key Bindings|default setting]]. | '''/unbind''' removes a key binding and resets the key's action back to its [[Default Key Bindings|default setting]]. | ||
:Note: This is different from {{slashcommand|bind|trigger}} "nop" (nop is an abbreviation for "no operation"). | :Note: This is different from {{slashcommand|bind|trigger}} "nop" (nop is an abbreviation for "no operation"). | ||
==Example== | |||
/unbind SHIFT+K | |||
{{Navbox Binds}} | {{Navbox Binds}} | ||
[[Category:Bind Commands]] | |||
[[Category:Slash Commands]] | [[Category:Slash Commands]] |
Latest revision as of 14:18, 28 December 2022
Slash Command
/unbind trigger
trigger is a key or key combination, such as 'H' and 'LSHIFT+H'. See List of Key Names for a... list of key names.
- Note: Chord keys (ALT, SHIFT, CTRL) are the only keys that can be added to create key combinations. You cannot create a key combo of 'NUMPAD1+RBUTTON'.
/unbind removes a key binding and resets the key's action back to its default setting.
- Note: This is different from /bind trigger "nop" (nop is an abbreviation for "no operation").
Example
/unbind SHIFT+K