Everyone should know this. Ever since Mario, the 1-Up stands for an extra life. Adds “Additional Monsters.” When fighting a boss monster, it will sometimes summon additional things for you to fight. Aggro “Aggravated” or “Aggravation.” When you have aggro, that means the monster is focused only on hitting you and no other. Report date aug 1992 2. Dates covered to 4. Title and subtitle large class 1.3 rocket motor detonation character 5a. Contract number 5b. Grant number 5c. Program element number 6. Project number 5e. Work unit number 7. Performing organization name(s) and address(es). Uk.media.radio.archers list of Nicknames and Abbreviations. Updated 1 May 2002. new/updated. This irregularly posted list may help you to follow and better understand the postings in this newsgroup. But I make no promises. Note: some items previously featured in this list have now been removed to the BANANA (Bad Acronyms, Nonentities.
Freedoms of air: right to 1) land for technical reasons, 2) carry from home to foreign country, 3) from foreign to home country, 4) carry between foreign countries, 5) overfly. French, Russian, American service: different styles of table service; French is most elaborate, American simplest. CGA 3.1.20 Note: Often color codes are used to help designate cylinders. Arbitrary paint is not recommended. Are charged or full cylinders labeled and stored away from empty cylinders? CGA 3.3.4 and 29 CFR 1910.101(b) Is the bottom of the cylinder protected from the ground to prevent rusting?
Remember that old saying that humans only use 10 percent of their brains? If that’s true, we must be using even less of our Macs’ brains. We wind up typing the same things over and over—your name and address in a form, your email address, directions to your house, your phone number, your preferred email sign-off—when we should let our Mac handle it instead. That’s where Rocket Typist comes in.
How do you save and recall commonly used text clips?
Rocket Typist is a new Mac app that lets you save snippets of text that will expand when you type a shortcut. If you already use the wonderful TextExpander app by Smile Software, this probably sounds familiar, and it should.
Well, Rocket Typist is a standalone product, it stores all your snippets locally, and it was just added to Setapp, giving you even more value for your Setapp subscription. We think you’re going to love how much time it’ll save you.
Why you need Rocket Typist
Everyone has to type things, and most of us wind up typing a lot of the same things again and again. Your name, your phone number, your address, email, but that’s only scratching the surface. You could keep snippets for the answers to questions you get a lot, the template of a report you have to compile every week, code snippets you use frequently, words you’re constantly misspelling, or for anything you find yourself copying-and-pasting a lot.
Think of Rocket Typist like a permanent clipboard, and use text expansion in your daily workflow - save your frequently used texts and templates to boost your productivity.
What about security? This text expander stores all your snippets locally, so nothing is sent up to the cloud. That means you could use it to store sensitive info that’s hard to remember, like your children’s social security numbers—but if you do, you should also keep your Mac encrypted with FileVault and be sure to use a strong passcode. (If you use a password manager like 1Password, that’s an even better place to store secure info like that, since security is a password manager’s main mission.)
Four ways to use this text expansion app
Rocket Typist hangs out in your menubar, and it’s actually quite flexible in how you can use it.
Store snippets to access manually.
You can simply store text snippets in Rocket Typist’s Snippet Editor, and access them manually by clicking the rocket icon in the menubar.
There, you can search for your snippet, and click it to copy it your clipboard. Then you can paste it anywhere you like.
You can also find snippets with Spotlight, or set up a key command to open the menubar menu in the Preferences.
Auto-paste snippets.
If you’d like those copied snippets to auto-paste into your document as soon as they hit your clipboard, head to the Preferences, click the Auto-Paste tab, and check the box to Enable Auto-Paste. The sound is optional.
Set abbreviations.
The typing shortcut option makes Rocket Typist tremendously useful. Instead of having to search for and select your snippet manually, you can create a text expansion rule. Then you can just type the abbreviation, and the snippet will appear automatically.
To turn this on, head to the Preferences, click the Abbreviations tab, and check the box to Enable Abbreviations. After you type an abbreviation, you need to hit one more key to make it expand to the full snippet, and you can choose the space bar, Tab key, or Return.
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This feature allows you to automatically fill frequently used long sentences with short abbreviations or keyboard shortcuts.
Exclude applications.
For your abbreviations, you should pick a string that would never appear naturally in a word. I like to just add an X to the end, so for example, to type my address, I use the abbreviation addx.
Rocket Typist 1 3 1 – Expand Typed Abbreviations Acronyms Words
But if I found myself accidentally typing that in another application (maybe data entry, or when playing a game), Rocket Typist lets you exclude applications from your abbreviations in Preferences > Abbreviations.
![]() How to make your text snippets smarterRocket Typist 1 3 1 – Expand Typed Abbreviations Acronyms Worksheets
Open the Snippet Editor, and when you’re composing a new snippet, you can click the little magic wand button at the top-right for more options. They let you set up more complex snippets that you can use as templates for email replies, reports, and more.
Give Rocket Typist a spin, and we think you'll be impressed with how much time and effort it can save you.
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