The Right Side Of Town Mac OS

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How to use Split View on a Mac with macOS 10.14 Mojave. Split View moves two apps to a new desktop of their own side by side. Or by swiping left or right with four fingers on a trackpad.

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Officially, the operating system that was available on that Mac at the time that you bought it is the oldest version of macOS that can run on that Mac. It's likely that an older OS won't include. But then a (wrong headed) desire to put the download button and iOS sharing button in the top right of Safari seemed to override this ideal across all of Mac OS X, and we lost the normal and rightful maximise button in this little trio. It's been replaced with the fullscreen, new space button.

Since I don't have a Mac yet, you can skip the suck-it-up comments I've seen on other posts. I would like to buy a Mac... But I want the three window buttons on the left, moved to the right side, not to just be like MS Windows, but to also be like most of the window managers for X Windows (Linux). You can move MS Windows buttons to the left side, is it really the case that there is no way to move these buttons to the right on a Mac?


BTW, this is a 18 years of doing this on the right, OCD deal breaker for me, when it comes to buying my first Mac. I can deal with the other UI differences.

Mac mini, OS X Mountain Lion (10.8.3)

The Right Side Of Town Mac Os Download

The

Posted on May 7, 2013 8:29 AM

Matt Cone March 6, 2007 TutorialsMacHardware

The Right Side Of Town Mac Os X

For as long as anybody can remember, the Mac mouse has had one button and the PC mouse has had two. Why? Apple presumably felt that a one-button mouse was simpler and more efficient, and nearly every other hardware manufacturer thought that more functionality could be crammed into additional mouse buttons.

Battle of the buttons? A standard two-button mouse and the Apple ADB Mouse II.

That is, until Apple released the Magic Mouse - a mouse with four programmable buttons. This was a major milestone for Apple and Mac users everywhere, but truth be told, the Mac OS supported right-clicking for years before that - even back in the days of Mac OS 9! If you have a Mac, you need to know how to right-click whether you have a two-button mouse or not. We’ll show you how.

What Can Right-Clicking Do For Me?

If you have a Mac, and you haven’t been right-clicking, you’ve been missing out on a lot of cool functionality. There are loads of options in the “contextual menus” - menus that appear when you right-click - that you just can’t find anywhere else. Here are some examples:

  • When you’re typing an email message in Apple’s Mail application and you misspell a word, Mail underlines it in red to indicate that it thinks it’s misspelled. But how do you correct it? When you right-click on the misspelled word, Mail provides correct spelling suggestions. Simply select one of the correct spellings to substitute.

  • If you’ve found a file on the Internet that you want to save to your Mac, you can right-click on the link to save it.

  • There are lots of shortcuts hidden in the Desktop contextual menu. For example, if you’d like to change your desktop, all you have to do is right-click on the Desktop and select Change Desktop Background.

How to Do It

The easiest way to right-click is to hold down the ctrl key before you click your mouse button. This works on any Mac!

But holding down the ctrl key gets old, especially when you’re an old-hand at right-clicking. If you’re serious about right-clicking, you’ll need to get a mouse with more than one mouse button. All of Apple’s new desktop computers (except the Mac mini) ship with the Mighty Mouse. To configure the right mouse button on the Mighty Mouse, select System Preferences from the Apple menu, and then select Keyboard & Mouse. Select the Mouse tab.

Make sure the right mouse button is set as the Secondary Button, as seen in the screenshot above. If you don’t have Apple’s Mighty Mouse, you can always pick up an inexpensive, two-button USB mouse at your local electronics store. Kensington’s Mouse-in-a-Box comes with a 5 year warranty and costs a mere $8.

For Apple Laptop Owners

If you own a Macbook or Macbook Pro, you can configure your trackpad for right-clicking. (Some older iBooks and Powerbooks also provide this feature.) Simply open the Trackpad options in System Preferences and make sure the Place two fingers on trackpad and click button for secondary click button is checked.

After checking this box, you’ll be able to right-click by placing two fingers on the trackpad and clicking. If you have an older Apple portable which doesn’t support this feature, you may want to look into iScroll2, a free application that may add this functionality to your trackpad.

No matter how you decide to right-click, you should definitely start doing it on a regular basis. It’ll save you a lot of time!

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