It might be a stupid question, but I keep forgetting to ask, so here it is...
I feel like the most common method of quick-cleaning a keyboard is to spray compressed air between the keys. A lot of junk comes out! But I can't imagine why this is actually done...
If you think about the way the keycaps are shaped, and the way the switches are elevated off the plate or casing, aren't the internals normally out of harm's way of dust/dirt/food/etc? When you start blowing it all around, turning the keyboard sideways or upside down when you do (to aid in the stuff falling out) are you not actually giving the junk a chance to get into these usually-unreachable places?
Maybe every time I think about this, it's because I'm imagining a Cherry switch, high and mighty above all the crap down below. Then air blowing all the stuff around, and it landing on/near the stem. In the case of a tilted or upside-down board, all the stuff landing on the inside of the keycap... then once righted, down into the switch itself.
Even rubber domes have design that makes it look like it is impossible for dust to get in under normal conditions.
I'm asking because I don't want dust to get into places I cannot get it out of, but can I really avoid ever doing this, taking off all the keycaps every time?