Live on Chrome Web Store

Mac Click
Learn Mac keyboard shortcuts

You moved to a Mac and the muscle memory from Windows keeps landing on the wrong key. Mac Click shows the shortcut for any common action on a picture of the keyboard, lights up the keys to press, and lets you drill them until they feel natural.

Free. Works offline. No account. No data collected.

See the keys, then make them stick

Switching from Windows to a Mac means relearning shortcuts you used without thinking. Ctrl becomes Command, and half of your reflexes hit the wrong key. Mac Click closes that gap. Pick an action like copy, reopen a closed tab, or jump to the start of a line, and the keys you need light up on the keyboard: the command keys in gold, the action key in green.

Each shortcut also shows the Windows combination next to the Mac one, so you can connect the reflex you already have to the keys you are learning.

Everything runs inside the page. There is no account, no setup, and no network request. Open it, learn a shortcut, and close it.

What you get

Visual keyboard

Every shortcut is shown on a full keyboard. The exact keys light up, so you see what to press instead of reading a list of symbols.

Learn and practice

Browse in Learn mode to see the keys and a short note. Switch to Practice and prove you remember them on the keyboard.

Windows to Mac

Each card shows the old Windows shortcut beside the Mac one, so the jump from Ctrl to Command is clear at a glance.

Practice with a streak

Practice names an action and you press the keys. A correct answer builds your streak, a wrong one lights the keys you chose in red.

Eight languages

The interface speaks English, Russian, Spanish, Portuguese, German, French, Chinese, and Japanese, picked from your browser.

Offline and private

Fonts and shortcut data are bundled in. Mac Click makes no network requests, asks for no permissions, and stores nothing.

From a name to a key press

Mac Click works in two modes. Learn shows you the answer. Practice checks that you remember it. Both run entirely in the page, with nothing loaded from the web.

Pick an action // copy, reopen tab, start of line
Keys light up // command keys gold, action key green
Press them together // the way you would on a real Mac
Practice mode // it names an action, you answer
Streak grows // right answers add up, wrong ones go red
Learn mode
Pick any action from the list or search for it. The keyboard highlights the keys it uses, and a short line explains what the shortcut does. The matching Windows combination sits right next to it.
Practice mode
Mac Click names an action and you answer on the keyboard, by tapping the keys or pressing them on your own keyboard. A correct answer adds to your streak. A wrong one turns the keys you chose red, so you can see the miss and try again.

What you can learn

Mac Click covers the shortcuts you reach for every day, grouped so you can drill one area at a time.

Copy / Paste / Cut Undo / Redo Select all Save Find Print Switch apps Spotlight New tab / window Close / Quit Force quit Screenshots Delete a word Start / end of line Reopen closed tab Address bar Reload Bookmark Tabs Downloads

Common questions

Is Mac Click free?

Yes. It is free, with no account and no in-app purchases.

Does it send my data anywhere?

No. Mac Click makes no network requests and asks for no permissions. Everything runs in its own page. Read the full privacy policy.

Do I need a Mac to use it?

No. It runs in Chrome on any computer. It is built for people moving to a Mac, so you can learn the shortcuts on the machine you have now and arrive ready.

Which shortcuts does it cover?

The everyday ones: editing, windows and apps, screenshots, text movement, and browser shortcuts. Each comes with the Windows equivalent so the mapping is obvious.

Will the shortcuts fire while I practice?

In Practice mode you press the keys on Mac Click's own page, which catches them so the browser does not run them by accident. The risky ones that the browser or the system would grab first, like closing a tab, are shown in Learn mode rather than the practice pool.

Why an extension and not a website?

So the trainer sits one click away in your toolbar whenever you want a quick refresher, and so it runs fully offline with nothing loaded from the web.

Runs in your browser. No permissions, no network, no data. Read the privacy policy

Build the muscle memory before you switch

Free. Works in your browser. No account, nothing uploaded.

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