Dragthing in swift11/13/2022 ![]() Dragthing in swift driver#Reading the word of the app in the menu bar, even if it's just through my peripheral vision, makes the focus behavior far more obvious.Īnd an "app-less desktop" more or less necessitates that you now dedicate an entire meta/super/Windows/whatever key to the window manager, which is just such a waste of keyboard real estate, as well as a driver for key command inconsistency. It's easy to lose context of what app is focused, since a slight dimming of buttons isn't quite as obvious as I'd like. the big ones) far more weird and infuriating. I find the "app-less desktop" of Windows and all the Linux DE's I've tried (i.e. > There's nothing at all wrong with the behavior, and it's perfectly logical once you understand what is going on, but it's certainly not intuitive. If you close all open windows in Preview and quit, then start it again, it will do the same thing. But this particular behavior is just macOS working the way that it does. There's a lot to complain about with Finder my personal peeve is that I want two-finger-swipe-right to go back one directory, like the back button in browsers. If I see what I expect to see, I've probably already typed Cmd-N or Cmd-O, depending. I've been on OS X since 2003, and it took me a second to figure out what you were talking about here, because if I don't see the window I expect to see, my eyes immediately flick to the upper-left corner. It's not just Finder, most macOS programs are perfectly happy having no window open. A corollary of this is that you don't need a window to have a program. There's only one at a time, and it belongs to the program which has the focus. One of the fundamental differences between macOS and Windows is the menu bar. This would be an example of the 10% of the UI which isn't identical. Why is it that when I click Finder, nothing actually opens? ![]()
0 Comments
Leave a Reply.AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |