![]() I hate Windows, but I also hate Mac Os for its dumb opiniated design choices that after 20 years theres still no option for fixing, so u need to pay 20$ for some tools that give you sane usability (also the the need for better touch tool to get proper tap to drag without a release delay).Īnd the worst is the fanboys that act like Mac Os’ wonky choices are a necessity because I’m holding wrong and they never had a problem with it. In Mac Os you cant really do that, because u have to cycle through all the windows of the same software to get back to the other terminal window youre working on.Īnd thats why people use non keyboard methods for switching windows, which sux, And you switch back and forth between two or three of these windows. Now imagine u have 10 terminal windows and 3 chrome windows open. The one switches to the most recently used other software, the other cycles through the windows of the same software. The problem is MacOs’ window switching behavior when using alt-tab and alt-`. You can use the Mac with a keyboard only, but you may have to Google some shortcuts, unfortunately. The letters are underlined in dialog boxes. Or maybe it's a virtual desktop thing (Spaces), which I don't use.Īnyway, I use keyboard shortcuts extensively, command-tilde will switch between windows on the same app, for instance, if that's what you're looking for.īut keyboard shortcuts are much more discoverable in Windows than on the Mac. And that's not weird at all, just different. I _think_ the author is struggling with the fact that Mac apps can be open and have no windows. ![]() “…an issue where you can select an app and it does absolutely nothing” ![]() I didn't directly address the original post issues because it's hard for me to even understand it, since it's nothing I've ever dealt with. Aside from some obviously dumb things (like drive letters), some are just different and understanding them decreased my frustration. Not that being able to select a window and switch to it isn't valuable, just that that's how the Dock should already work, and Dock doesn't take up 10-15% of the screen.ĭidn't mean to sound condescending, it was my actual experience with Windows. It takes up quite a lot of the screen for the value it gives you. It works well (that is, it does what it's supposed to), except it's missing the ability to change the size of the window thumbnails. It's like a cross between Mission Control and the Dock. I tried the newest entry, Stage Manager, for several months. The other problem with Mission Control is that it should not require your entire screen to switch apps. Maybe Apple stubbornly assumes everyone will use a touchpad for everything, despite them selling products without touchpads in them. However, it does not support keyboard shortcuts for navigating and selecting an application! How is this possible? It feels like a couple story point ticket to me, yet it remains a problem after a decade. ![]() Mission Control is probably the most useful method, because it actually brings selected applications on screen (the minimum functionality you would expect). Both of the above patterns work better in Windows, and have worked better for decades, and Apple designers should be a little ashamed of that. The Dock has the same issue with letting you click on an app, and then not bringing that app on screen, or telling me why it's ignoring my command. And whatever that perfectly good reason is, there is an even more perfectly good reason to make it work the way users expect. I am sure "real mac users" get it, and I'm happy for them, but poor benighted souls like me just wonder why their $2500 computer isn't doing what they're telling it to. Is it ignoring me because the app is minimized? Did it send it to another desktop? I have no idea! It must be deterministic, but I'll be damned if I can figure it out. Over the years, Apple has implemented inadequate window management in MacOS in a number of ways, empowering the user by giving them the choice of which method to be frustrated by.įor example, the CMD+Tab task switcher seems natural, but it has an issue where you can select an app and it does absolutely nothing, which is both infuriating and incomprehensible. ![]()
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