Power user setup on OS X

marco:

Casey Liss just got his first Mac. (I guess I won this.)

Note to Windows readers: This post is full of the little squiggly “⌘” symbol found on the “Apple key” on the keyboard. Windows’ Unicode support is half-assed, so if you can’t see ⌘this⌘symbol⌘ or if it shows up as question marks or boxes, oh well. You’re probably already skimming over this post anyway because you’re angry that someone on the internet is writing about Apple again and their computers are for hipsters with too much money and how could they charge so much for looks and you got such a good deal on that 9-pound Windows laptop with the blue LEDs and you hate Macs except that you last tried them in 1995 when they truly did suck and you’d get one now if you could afford it but you don’t want to admit that but don’t worry you’ll change your mind and buy one anyway in 6 months.

Casey, welcome to the addiction! Here are some quick tips for power users getting started on OS X for the first time.

System Preferences that you probably want:

  • Appearance: Place scroll arrows: At top and bottom
  • Desktop & Screen Saver: uncheck Translucent Menu Bar
  • Dock:
  • Keyboard & Mouse: (under Keyboard Shortcuts) Full Keyboard Access: All controls
  • Sharing: Here you can enable Apache (Web Sharing) or SSH (Remote Login) if you want.

Shortcut keys that are your new best friends:

(Note: Command == Apple == ⌘. And in menu shortcut-key descriptions, ^ is Ctrl, up-arrow is Shift, and that weird slanty-dashy symbol is Option.)

  • ⌘Q: quit entire application
  • ⌘H: hide entire application
  • ⌘M: minimize current window (not entire application)
  • ⌘W: close current window or tab (not entire application)
  • ⌘X/C/V/Z: cut/copy/paste/undo, just like Windows
  • ⌘-comma: application preferences
  • ⌘-tab: Switch between entire applications
  • ⌘-tilde: Switch between windows of the current application
  • ⌘N: new window
  • ⌘T: new tab

Generally, most common Control-and-single-letter Windows shortcut keys map directly to the ⌘ key with the same letter on Macs (X/C/V/Z/P/A/S). You have to get used to using your left thumb instead of the pinky for the modifier, but you’ll find after a bit of time that it’s actually far easier to reach.

It may take a little while to get used to the distinction Apple makes between applications and windows. You can close every window of some apps, but they still remain open (as long as that dot’s below their icon in the Dock) unless you Quit them (⌘Q). And Alt-Tab (⌘-tab here) doesn’t work like Windows because it goes through applications, not windows — and ⌘-tilde goes through windows of just the current application.

Oh, and you probably want to install Quicksilver, move Spotlight to a different shortcut key, and bind Quicksilver to ⌘-space.

I agree with most of this post but I just want to chip in my own pitiful amount of currency to the topic: I find having ⌘-space for my Quicksilver key to be a little too inviting to mistakes (I’m quite a ham-fisted typist). I therefore bind Quicksilver to ctrl-shift-tab - a little out of the way but definitely out of the way of my inaccurate wrath. 

Quicksilver is one of my favourite apps for the Mac but I really must emphasise how important cleaning out the catalogues is - Quicksilver tripled my login times on my Mac due to my gung-ho installation of a dozen or more different plugins etc. While it might be cool, you will most likely not need your bookmarks in Quicksilver.

While I’m discussing random keybinds I’d like to pimp Sidenote (http://www.chatelp.org/?s=Sidenote) - I have this bound to ctrl-shift-§, just one key up from my Quicksilver shortcut. I must admit, that combo is even less intuitive than my Quicksilver key combo but I use it all the time. 

Found via marco. Posted Tuesday, June 10th, at 11:55 AM (∞).

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