Command Palette
Press ⌘K (Ctrl+K on Windows) anywhere on the dashboard and start typing. One search box reaches everything you would otherwise click through: panels, date ranges, your other sites, saved segments, filters, settings, and the theme. A few letters, Enter, done.
What you can reach
- Go to: every panel view: Sources, Locations, Technologies, Campaigns, Pages, Sessions, Goals, and Journeys, plus Filters and Settings.
- Date range: every preset from the date picker. Type "91", "month", or "all" instead of scanning a menu. Chart granularity carries over exactly as if you had picked the range by hand.
- Switch site: type any part of a domain name.
- Apply segment: your saved segments, by name.
- Theme: light, dark, or system.
The palette is strictly navigation and selection. Nothing in it deletes or changes data, so there is no way to break anything while exploring it.
Keyboard shortcuts
A handful of single keys covers the surfaces you touch most. D, F, and S are toggles: the key that opened a surface also closes it. All shortcuts pause automatically while you are typing in a field or while a dialog is open, so they never swallow real input.
Stepping through time
The arrow keys move the current date range by exactly one period:
- On Last 7 Days, ← jumps to the seven days before that, and so on, window by window.
- Today and Yesterday flow into each other. Stepping further back walks through single days, hourly chart included.
- Full calendar months stay calendar months. From Last Month, ← is the month before, whatever its length. Stepping forward into the current month lands on Month to Date.
- → never crosses today. Realtime, Last 24H, and All Time ignore the arrows entirely.
Each step commits like a normal range change: granularity carries over, the comparison baseline recomputes, and the URL updates so the view stays shareable.
Good to know
- The palette and shortcuts work across the dashboard view. In shared links and the demo, account-level actions such as site switching and settings stay hidden.
- There are deliberately no letter keys for individual date presets. The date picker already uses letters on its granularity pills, and typing "28" into the palette is faster than memorizing a letter per range.
- Esc closes the palette and any open surface.