The beauty and the terror of oddly-specific commands

Right next to the generic function to delete photos by going through them one by one, my camera has a specific version – Delete All With This Date:

Below the actions to close the tab, and close all other tabs, Chrome has a specific version called Close Tabs To The Right:

In After Effects, next to typical save options, there is this – Increment And Save – which saves a file and changes the number at the end to be one notch higher (Project 2 → Project 3, and so on):

I’m mildly fascinated by these strangely specific accelerators.

The one in the camera is genuinely useful. Photo projects are often day-long affairs where you download the photos at the end of workday, but might still keep them on the card just in case. Allowing to quickly delete a day’s worth of photos makes a lot of sense, saving you from having to go through them one by one in an interface not suited for that kind of operation.

Chrome’s “Close Tabs to the Right” takes a bit of figuring out, but I believe it’s meant to make it easy to clean up after a fruitful research session where you kept ⌘-clicking and opening tabs to learn more, and those tabs now fulfilled their purpose. (Curiously, Firefox also has “Close Tabs To Left” which I don’t understand.)

After Effects’s “Increment and Save” is… I don’t know. Maybe it’s cheap? Maybe it’s honest? A proper version history would be nicer, but that’s a tall order. This is simple and, most importantly, reliable. I still often do the “poor man’s version control” elsewhere…

…so this works for me.

It’s always interesting to me to think whether these kinds of oddly-specific examples are nice gestures toward the user, or treating symptoms in lieu of fixing actual problems. Either way, I don’t think an interface can survive too many of these, as their obscurity and weirdness add up and can contaminate the entire UI.

Would love if you sent me more of these kinds of commands from the apps you use!