2009/11/03
I love it when I discover something in the Mac interface that’s probably been lurking there for almost ever, and I just didn’t realize it. I don’t even know what prompted me to try this, but the spirit moved me and now I have another trick in my arsenal.
You’re in an Open dialog and you’ve selected something in the list—but is that the item you really want? You’d rather move to the Finder and peruse the folder the item’s in. It’s in a deeply nested folder, though, and you’ll have to do some digging. Or not: with an item selected, press Command-R (mnemonic: “Reveal”) and you’re moved to the Finder with the item’s folder opened.
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Finder/Desktop, OS Features, Open/Save Dialogs | Tagged: Finder, Mac, MacBook, tips |
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Posted by mactipster
2009/08/27
[One of a series regarding Snow Leopard’s new Finder menu commands.]
Another addition to the Go menu, which shows up when you press Shift, is Select Startup Disk on Desktop. At first I was practically thrilled about this—until I realized I had misread its intent: I thought it meant you could select a disk/volume on the Desktop and make it the startup volume—a procedure otherwise necessitating a trip to System Preferences.
But, noooo… All this does is, literally, select the startup disk on your Desktop: if you have more than one volume with an OS on it, and you don’t remember which one is running the show (which one you started up with), choosing this command selects the icon of the startup disk. Big deal. (Did the sarcasm come through?)
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Finder/Desktop, Snow Leopard, Tip | Tagged: Finder, Mac, Snow Leopard, tips |
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Posted by mactipster
2009/08/27
[One of a series regarding Snow Leopard’s new Finder menu commands.]
Snow Leopard has fixed what seemed to some of us a glaring omission in its Go menu—a way to open a window for the Documents folder. Why glaring? Because it’s a folder that gets heavy use—you’re supposed to put all your docs in it, for heaven’s sake!—and because all the other items you can turn on for the sidebar in Finder Preferences have keyboard commands assigned to them.
Of course, Command-Shift-D is already taken by the Go to Desktop option, so, according to a venerable convention of Mac keyboard-command assignments, the second letter of Documents is used for this: Command-Shift-O.
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Finder/Desktop, Snow Leopard, Tip | Tagged: Finder, Mac, Snow Leopard, tips |
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Posted by mactipster
2009/08/27
[One of a series regarding Snow Leopard’s new Finder menu commands.]
Press Option, and the File menu’s Open command changes to Open and Close Window (with the expected change of Command-O changing to Command-Option-O). This doesn’t sound like a useful command, does it? After all, opening and then closing the window automatically doesn’t give you much time to do anything, even if you’re a super-speedy reader. It is useful however, because its full name is “Open a new window for the selected folder, and close the one the folder is in.” Read the rest of this entry »
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Finder/Desktop, Snow Leopard, Tip | Tagged: Finder, Mac, Snow Leopard |
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Posted by mactipster
2009/08/27
[One of a series regarding Snow Leopard’s new Finder menu commands.]
The new kid on the File menu block is Add to Dock, which shows up when you press Shift. Select an icon in the Finder, choose the command, and, voila—you’ve saved yourself from dragging something a mile across a large screen.
The Command-Shift-T shortcut for this menu choice that used to be assigned to Add to Favorites now works for this new command.
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Apple, Finder/Desktop, Snow Leopard, Tip | Tagged: Finder, Mac, Snow Leopard |
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Posted by mactipster
2009/07/12
Option-clicking on a folder in the sidebar shouldn’t, theoretically, do anything useful: an Option-double-click inside a Finder window closes the window as the new item (another folder, or an application) opens. A plain click on a folder in the sidebar displays it in the current window, so why would you want to close it? Glad you asked!
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Apple, Finder/Desktop, Leopard, Tip | Tagged: Leopard, Mac, tips |
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Posted by mactipster