Os x lion snap windows
Window snapping can be customized for each corner and and side except bottom. You can define snap areas for any sort of window position and dimension. Shortcut behavior may be customized depending on application.
It sounds like while this would let me customize it, it would be snapping to, for lack of a better term, custom presets rather than on-the-fly window edge snapping. Is this true? TimothyMueller-Harder I'm not sure what you mean by on-the-fly window edge snapping, but yes, this is tool offers customizable snapping presents. I mean, for example, if there's a window of a random size in a random place, will I be able to snap another window to the edge of it, regardless of where they are on the screen?
The Overflow Blog. Stack Gives Back Safety in numbers: crowdsourcing data on nefarious IP addresses. Featured on Meta. New post summary designs on greatest hits now, everywhere else eventually. Linked Related I really tried to adapt and like it. I would very much appreciate the opposite behaviour of what we have today: Snap when holding down the option key, classic free window moving when moving windows normally, without holding down any keys. At one time it was easy for me to move a window any where I wanted it.
Apple keeps adding idiotic features that hinder more than they help. I used to love Apple. But now they are getting shittier and shittier every year. Ask yourself when you would use a window tiling feature? Probably when you need to compare or reference a second or third on screen visual. I want windows to go where I put them. Why does Apple think they know more about what I want than I do? Please give us a way to turn this off. I work with multiple monitors and lots of big windows from multiple applications, that now just tend to get stuck to each other every time I try to move them.
I realize some people might like it, and that apple wants to enable it by default to show it off. But why oh why is there no way to turn it off?!? I hate hate hate HATE this feature. It drives me up the freaking wall. I like to position windows very near each other but not touching and I constantly have to work against this stupid, useless, moronic feature.
Apple really needs to give users the reasonable option to turn this annoying and unwanted feature off. To call what I just watched in that 22 second video more full featured than Windows 10 window snapping is an insane joke. Hate it! It totally breaks the UI paradigm, and drives me nuts. I want it gone. I would settle for preference to turn it off. I have used a tool called Better Snap Tool. It is really great esp. You can easily drag windows around to convenient locations and get full screen, half screen a other sizes.
You can also make shortcut keys like Cmd-Option-B for to resize the current window into the bottom half. No more trying to get to the part of the screen that has ended up off screen. Sounds like Apple is doing something but not quite the productivity-focused one BetterSnapTool. I use it daily. Colour me stupid, I must be doing something wrong…Any comments welcome helpful ones please! This website provides an application that you can download that mimics the same behavior.
It's very useful when you're trying to take notes or transcribe something into a text-input program while viewing another window. Page content loaded. Sep 8, PM in response to graysonpaul In response to graysonpaul.
Sep 8, PM. What I mean is this: imagine there is an imaginary X and Y axis on the screen. So that way, I could easily manuever windows to be open adjacent to each other without repetitive re-sizing by means of the corners. Does that make sense? Nano 7 - backgrounds TM backup via Ethernet. News from Macworld Hachette book preorders return to Amazon as companies come to terms The Week in iOS Apps: Taylor Swift fans are gonna play, play, play Facebook lays ground for ad push and payments with updated privacy policy Free advice: Apple gets what it pays for Review: iXpand Flash Drive adds easy-to-use extra storage to your iPad and iPhone Alpine Headphones review: These are thumpin' good cans Creaticity: The ultimate guide to better selfies Changes coming to Twitter: Videos, timeline highlights, and new ways to chat Google YouTube Music Key one-ups streaming music services by adding videos The Week in iOS Accessories: Make your gloves touchscreen friendly Apple?
From Our Sponsors. Click on the button on the upper left corner and choose AppleScript. Now you just have to click on File, choose the AppleScript you want to be executed, and choose the shortcut. I personally used these shortcuts, but you may choose anything you want: Command-Option-Left Arrow: set window to the left side of the screen Command-Option-Right Arrow: set window to the right side of the screen Command-Option-Down Arrow: minimize window Command-Option-Up Arrow: maximize window Also, don't forget to start Spark by clicking on Start Spark Daemon on the bottom of the program's window!
This works fine for almost all of my applications. However, all other applications behave as expected. I did this on Snow Leopard, but I guess it should work on Leopard as well. Search Advanced From our Sponsor User Functions Username: Password: Lost your password?
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