Mac|Life

Super Sierra Shortcuts

Get to know your function key combos and you can zip from task to task

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For ce Quit

The Force Quit key combo ( ç+ Alt+ oe) isn’t a panacea for whatever ails your Mac, but it’s the quickest way to see which apps are unresponsi­ve; they’re clearly marked in the list this shortcut reveals, and there’s a button to force the selected apps to quit.

Hide everything

You may know that ç+h hides all of the active app’s windows, and that you can click the app’s Dock icon to bring them back. If you have a screen full of sensitive info in multiple apps, you might put the display to sleep using a method described at apple.

co/2frGvfl, which differ between models.

Secure your Mac

When leaving your Mac alone for a moment in a shared space, logging out is an extreme way to secure it, and it can take a while for your apps and docs to reopen if you do that. Instead, ensure a password is required to wake from sleep (in Security & Privacy prefs) and in Mission Control’s prefs click Hot Corners and set one of them to put the display to sleep when you move the pointer there (optionally only while holding a modifier key combo to avoid accidental activation). Triggering this behavior returns you to the login window, but your account is still logged in and no apps or docs are closed in the process.

Clos ing and reopening

Hold Alt while clicking the “x” on a tab in Safari to close all tabs except that one. If you accidental­ly close a tab (or window), pressing

ç+ß+t will bring it back; as of Safari 10, you can repeat this command to reopen windows or tabs closed further back in time, and in History > Recently Closed you can reopen a specific page without having to step back through all those you closed later on.

Check your spelling

Two useful shortcuts you should invoke before sending every email: either press

ç+ß+; to open the Spelling and Grammar window and start a spellcheck or – our favored, quicker fix – ç+;, which steps through misspellin­gs. Some will be nouns and other words not in macOS’s dictionary, so you can press the latter combo to skip them. Another handy shortcut if you frequently type things like “teh”: ≈+t swaps the characters either side of the text cursor.

Move or copy files

Dragging a file between two folders on the same drive moves it from one to the other, but doing so between different drives copies it. Hold ç when dragging between drives to move a file, saving you the task of deleting the original. Hold Alt when dragging between folders on the same drive to create a duplicate. Holding

ç+ Alt when dragging creates a shortcut (alias) to the original file.

Find out where you are

Hold ç and click the title of a Finder window to see a breadcrumb trail of folders back to the top of the drive and your Mac. Simply click an item in the list to open it. This works on document titles in many apps, too. (Microsoft Office apps use

≈ instead of ç).

See all open Safari tabs

Press ç+ß+\ (or pinch together two fingers on your trackpad) to see thumbnails of all open tabs to save clicking through them to find the one you want, or use ≈+† or ≈+ß+† to advance right or left, respective­ly, along the tab bar with each press.

Navigate without a mouse

When your trackpad or mouse battery is flat, just press ≈+@ (add ƒ if the @ key on your keyboard defaults to being a screen brightness control) to move the focus to the  menu, then use the arrow keys to move left and right through the menu headings; æ opens a menu, and ® selects an item.

For Windows switchers…

If you’ve come from a Windows PC, particular­ly one that has a full-size keyboard with numeric keypad, doing simple things like deleting characters to the right of the insertion point, moving to the top or bottom of a document, or invoking pretty much any menu command that involves holding C on Microsoft’s operating system can cause much confusion initially. These docs will help you to adjust: apple. co/2fZOO6f, bit.ly/ 2goaQMO, and apple. co/2gcHYb3.

 ??  ?? Use a Hot Corner as a superfast way to lock your Mac without logging out.
Use a Hot Corner as a superfast way to lock your Mac without logging out.
 ??  ?? Force Quit can quickly tell you which apps have crashed.
Force Quit can quickly tell you which apps have crashed.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Using a gesture to move through Safari tabs is easier than clicking a button.
Using a gesture to move through Safari tabs is easier than clicking a button.
 ??  ?? It’s easy to reopen accidental­ly closed Safari tabs.
It’s easy to reopen accidental­ly closed Safari tabs.

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