![]() Probably the most used shortcut I created on my machine is one to hide and show hidden files. It also works for FTP (but i have not tested anything else)įor more, just run man open in Terminal or see ![]() Open will launch the default browser and open the url. open any URL with its default handler (e.g.Open /Path/to/dir/ will launch the folder in Finder, whereas open. open a Finder window into a network share.open a Finder window into a local directory.open song.mp3 will open song.mp3 in the default audio player (in my case iTunes) In Terminal, type open -a Application to launch an application that lives in the /Applications folder, or open to launch an application that is anywhere on your computer. launch any program in the PATH directories by executable name.launch programs by exact path to the executable.In Terminal (Applications/Utilities/Terminal), open can be pretty handy. I don't mean any offense to anyone's answer in doing so. ![]() Note: I added this because I find it to be useful. Hit esc while capturing an area or window to exit capture mode. ⌘+ ctrl+ ⇧+ 4 then space Capture a window, menu, desktop icon, or the menu bar and copy to the clipboardĪnother useful trick is to hold space while drawing a capture area to reposition it.Īnother trick is to hold option while drawing a capture area, to resize the area in all directions, instead of just the one corner you're dragging.įor fine-tuning on a certain axis, you can hold shift and the axis you next move in is the one you'll control. ⌘+ ⇧+ 4 then space Capture a window, menu, desktop icon, or the menu bar and save as a file ⌘+ ctrl+ ⇧+ 4 Capture dragged area and copy to the clipboard ⌘+ ⇧+ 4 Capture dragged area and save as a file ⌘+ ctrl+ ⇧+ 3 Capture entire screen and copy to the clipboard ⌘+ ⇧+ 3 Capture entire screen and save as a file ![]() So when you paste the images into other documents, they look fab. The nice thing is that OS X preserves the window drop shadow, with full alpha transparency. Upon pressing space, you get a large camera icon for your cursor, and it allows you to take a screenshot just of the highlighted window. I always find the ⌘+ ⇧+ 4, space (you must press space at the end otherwise it doesn't work) command is really useful, and one that a lot of people don't know you can do. ![]()
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