![]() Most of these apps are free or fair priced. Cut in finder: command-c, followed by command-option-v. Hide all Applications: command-option-h followed by command-m. And a few useful shortcuts: Show the desktop/ unshod -> (fn+) F11. Also automatically opens the chosen window even if minimised before (with the standard behaviour, you have to hold option for that) AltTab: Allows you switch between windows as opposed to application. Tried the later for 2 days and it worked fine for me, but I've read many times "don't buy it, it's abandonware by this point" so I'm not sure I'll actually buy it ubar gives you sort of an actual taskbar. Dockmate or ubar: Dockmate gives you window-previews of applications upon hovering over them. Notice that you now have to quit menu bar apps with command-w in order to keep them running. red quits: pressing on x of the last window of an application quits the application. Mac Mouse Fix: Allows you zoom with command + mouse scroll + allows you to turn of natural scrolling for your mouse, while retaining it the trackpad (i.e., the windows way) Hiden bar: Allows you to collapse all your menubar items into one thingy SensibleSideButtons: Allows you to use the forward/ backward keys on your mouse Monitor control: allows you to access brightness and sound of your monitor (dell hasn't released their own tool for my monitor, and this tool actually does the same) ![]() Menuwhere: Command+right click gives you the option of having the menubar-options wherever your mouse cursor is You can also download these protocols from the community ( ) to get windows like finder behaviour (return opens a file, f2 renames it, delete deletes it) Karabiner: Allows you to remap keys, so you can implement the Mac-layout on a windows keyboard (exception is only the fn-key - this one's usually hardware based and thus cannot be remapped). Just this giving this app a shoutout, because I feel like it gets completely lost in comparison to the other ones (rectangle, magnet.).Įdit: for the rest of you coming from windows more because of M1, than because you like macOS, here are a few other Apps I would recommend: That combined with command + m/q, Alfred/spotlight for launching, and AltTab for switching windows, gives you almost full control. I personally use CTRL + Arrows, CTRL + X. They also offer a bunch of swiping stuff but I'm not into that. After having played around with several apps, I think swish is the best solution for being able to move windows like you do on - well windows. So I recently came from windows to Mac, and frankly I was shocked how bad the macOS dock and the window management capabilities were (in comparison to the windows taskbar, and windows-key + arrows).
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