MacOS Sierra - Full screen/multi desktop WITH menu bar












13















This is driving me absolutely insane. I recently got a Macbook running macOS Sierra, and I do like the fullscreen app/multiple desktop feature as well as the 3 finger swipe gesture to switch between fullscreen apps and the desktop. Its become an integral part of my workflow - BUT



The menu bar hides automatically when I switch to fullscreen apps, which is so irritating. I use the Macbook for development, and I often will have atom IDE in one fullscreen, and chrome in another, and I will 3 finger swipe between them to code and then test.



But I often need to access the menu bar in both full screen apps, and currently I have to wait for it to decide to show when I move my mouse to the top of the screen, and then theres the times when I move my mouse too close to the top of the screen and it shows when I DONT want it to, and it covers up my file tabs in atom IDE, then I have to move the mouse down and wait for the menu bar to GO AWAY so I can change which file Im working on.



Im playing this constant irritating game of peekaboo with the stupid menu bar in full screen apps.



There MUST be a way to make the menu bar STAY at all times, surely? Either a global setting, or perhaps a per-app setting, maybe even editing the plist? Or at the very least, make the menu bar push the top of the fullscreen window down instead of covering it like it does with atom IDE



PS I dont want to simply 'maximize' my apps on the main desktop, I want them to go fullscreen on separate desktops but I just want a way to force the menu bar to stop hiding.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar. If that sounds acceptable I can set it out in a full answer, in detail.

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:30













  • yes that sounds good, id love to hear more, cheers

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:35











  • Done. Let me know if it all makes sense :) BTW, this has been my preferred method for 10 years or more

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:14


















13















This is driving me absolutely insane. I recently got a Macbook running macOS Sierra, and I do like the fullscreen app/multiple desktop feature as well as the 3 finger swipe gesture to switch between fullscreen apps and the desktop. Its become an integral part of my workflow - BUT



The menu bar hides automatically when I switch to fullscreen apps, which is so irritating. I use the Macbook for development, and I often will have atom IDE in one fullscreen, and chrome in another, and I will 3 finger swipe between them to code and then test.



But I often need to access the menu bar in both full screen apps, and currently I have to wait for it to decide to show when I move my mouse to the top of the screen, and then theres the times when I move my mouse too close to the top of the screen and it shows when I DONT want it to, and it covers up my file tabs in atom IDE, then I have to move the mouse down and wait for the menu bar to GO AWAY so I can change which file Im working on.



Im playing this constant irritating game of peekaboo with the stupid menu bar in full screen apps.



There MUST be a way to make the menu bar STAY at all times, surely? Either a global setting, or perhaps a per-app setting, maybe even editing the plist? Or at the very least, make the menu bar push the top of the fullscreen window down instead of covering it like it does with atom IDE



PS I dont want to simply 'maximize' my apps on the main desktop, I want them to go fullscreen on separate desktops but I just want a way to force the menu bar to stop hiding.










share|improve this question




















  • 1





    Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar. If that sounds acceptable I can set it out in a full answer, in detail.

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:30













  • yes that sounds good, id love to hear more, cheers

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:35











  • Done. Let me know if it all makes sense :) BTW, this has been my preferred method for 10 years or more

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:14
















13












13








13


3






This is driving me absolutely insane. I recently got a Macbook running macOS Sierra, and I do like the fullscreen app/multiple desktop feature as well as the 3 finger swipe gesture to switch between fullscreen apps and the desktop. Its become an integral part of my workflow - BUT



The menu bar hides automatically when I switch to fullscreen apps, which is so irritating. I use the Macbook for development, and I often will have atom IDE in one fullscreen, and chrome in another, and I will 3 finger swipe between them to code and then test.



But I often need to access the menu bar in both full screen apps, and currently I have to wait for it to decide to show when I move my mouse to the top of the screen, and then theres the times when I move my mouse too close to the top of the screen and it shows when I DONT want it to, and it covers up my file tabs in atom IDE, then I have to move the mouse down and wait for the menu bar to GO AWAY so I can change which file Im working on.



Im playing this constant irritating game of peekaboo with the stupid menu bar in full screen apps.



There MUST be a way to make the menu bar STAY at all times, surely? Either a global setting, or perhaps a per-app setting, maybe even editing the plist? Or at the very least, make the menu bar push the top of the fullscreen window down instead of covering it like it does with atom IDE



PS I dont want to simply 'maximize' my apps on the main desktop, I want them to go fullscreen on separate desktops but I just want a way to force the menu bar to stop hiding.










share|improve this question
















This is driving me absolutely insane. I recently got a Macbook running macOS Sierra, and I do like the fullscreen app/multiple desktop feature as well as the 3 finger swipe gesture to switch between fullscreen apps and the desktop. Its become an integral part of my workflow - BUT



The menu bar hides automatically when I switch to fullscreen apps, which is so irritating. I use the Macbook for development, and I often will have atom IDE in one fullscreen, and chrome in another, and I will 3 finger swipe between them to code and then test.



But I often need to access the menu bar in both full screen apps, and currently I have to wait for it to decide to show when I move my mouse to the top of the screen, and then theres the times when I move my mouse too close to the top of the screen and it shows when I DONT want it to, and it covers up my file tabs in atom IDE, then I have to move the mouse down and wait for the menu bar to GO AWAY so I can change which file Im working on.



Im playing this constant irritating game of peekaboo with the stupid menu bar in full screen apps.



There MUST be a way to make the menu bar STAY at all times, surely? Either a global setting, or perhaps a per-app setting, maybe even editing the plist? Or at the very least, make the menu bar push the top of the fullscreen window down instead of covering it like it does with atom IDE



PS I dont want to simply 'maximize' my apps on the main desktop, I want them to go fullscreen on separate desktops but I just want a way to force the menu bar to stop hiding.







macos mac macbook-pro fullscreen macos-sierra






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Mar 11 '17 at 4:58







Matthew Prasinov

















asked Mar 11 '17 at 4:45









Matthew PrasinovMatthew Prasinov

7819




7819








  • 1





    Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar. If that sounds acceptable I can set it out in a full answer, in detail.

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:30













  • yes that sounds good, id love to hear more, cheers

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:35











  • Done. Let me know if it all makes sense :) BTW, this has been my preferred method for 10 years or more

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:14
















  • 1





    Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar. If that sounds acceptable I can set it out in a full answer, in detail.

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:30













  • yes that sounds good, id love to hear more, cheers

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 6:35











  • Done. Let me know if it all makes sense :) BTW, this has been my preferred method for 10 years or more

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:14










1




1





Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar. If that sounds acceptable I can set it out in a full answer, in detail.

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 6:30







Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar. If that sounds acceptable I can set it out in a full answer, in detail.

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 6:30















yes that sounds good, id love to hear more, cheers

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 6:35





yes that sounds good, id love to hear more, cheers

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 6:35













Done. Let me know if it all makes sense :) BTW, this has been my preferred method for 10 years or more

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 7:14







Done. Let me know if it all makes sense :) BTW, this has been my preferred method for 10 years or more

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 7:14












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















12














TL:DR - Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar.



In detail...




  • Launch Mission Control.

    from the Dock,

    from a trackpad: Swipe up using three or four fingers.

    From the keyboard: Press the Mission Control key [F3]. Or, press Control-Up Arrow.
    enter image description here

    You probably only have one to start with

    Move your cursor up to it & it will expand...
    enter image description here

    Click the + sign to add more Spaces [I faked the + closer in photoshop, it will be extreme right]
    You can change the desktop background later if you like, same way as changing it on your first Space.


  • Move to one of your new Spaces.

    3-finger swipe, activate Mission Control & click one, or set up hotkeys.

    System Prefs > Keyboard > Shortcuts > Mission Control.

    By default these are set to Ctrl ⌃ [number] but aren't activated.

    [They're also set to the numbers above qwerty. if you have a 10-key numpad, you need to decide which to use; they are recognised as different keys, though you can't see the difference in that pane.
    enter image description here


  • Launch your first app. This will be its new home...

    Right click it in the Dock > Options > This Desktop
    enter image description here

    Set the window size to whatever you require - just not fullscreen ;-)

    Option/clicking the green dot will maximise instead, or you can just drag the window from any edge or corner.

    Repeat for your other apps.



You can change which Space any app occupies [or even single window, temporarily] by holding its title bar & hitting the key combo for the Space you want to go.



Key combos are faster than swiping or using control/arrow. Literally faster, the animation is double-speed plus you can go straight from 1 to 6 etc.



No more need for fullscreen apps, the menu bar will stay where it belongs. All you need to do is remember which numbered Space belongs to which app [or app 'set' you can have as many as you like if you manually tile them.

I tend to keep mine in sets, related apps on one Space, or if they need more room, on consecutive spaces.



One thing to note - fullscreen apps don't have a Space number, so you cannot use this method with them. Best you can get is to jump to the Space before, then swipe one to the right... yet another reason I avoid them entirely.



This is my 'home' Space 1... [pic shrunk to tiny] with Safari, Finder, Calendar, Messages, System Prefs & Activity Monitor - all ready to go.
enter image description here



One more thing...



For the sake of your sanity - disable Automatically rearrange Spaces & Displays have separate Spaces in System Prefs > Mission Control



enter image description here



Now you're in control of where every app lives & how quickly you can get there... and you get to keep the menu bar.

If you ever did want rid of the menu bar but keep the rest of this arrangement working as-is, it can be toggled in System Prefs > General - Automatically hide & show the menu bar; you just can't do the reverse for fullscreen apps.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    holy crap that was so detailed! thank you :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:24











  • Welcome. As a working method I reckon in two weeks you'll have forgotten what a nightmare fullscreen apps used to be ;)

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:26











  • haha i hope so. couple of questions, can you rename the desktops somehow? Desktop 1, Desktop 2 etc, isnt so helpful. Also can you make the dock hide on specific desktops, and not on the main/first desktop?

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:32













  • You just remember the numbers, you can't rename them. It's a very shallow learning curve, though - & unfortunately, all Dock behaviour is global, it auto-hides or not, depending on how it's set, same in every space

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:34











  • Ok cool, thanks so much for all the help :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:36










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1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes








1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes









active

oldest

votes






active

oldest

votes









12














TL:DR - Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar.



In detail...




  • Launch Mission Control.

    from the Dock,

    from a trackpad: Swipe up using three or four fingers.

    From the keyboard: Press the Mission Control key [F3]. Or, press Control-Up Arrow.
    enter image description here

    You probably only have one to start with

    Move your cursor up to it & it will expand...
    enter image description here

    Click the + sign to add more Spaces [I faked the + closer in photoshop, it will be extreme right]
    You can change the desktop background later if you like, same way as changing it on your first Space.


  • Move to one of your new Spaces.

    3-finger swipe, activate Mission Control & click one, or set up hotkeys.

    System Prefs > Keyboard > Shortcuts > Mission Control.

    By default these are set to Ctrl ⌃ [number] but aren't activated.

    [They're also set to the numbers above qwerty. if you have a 10-key numpad, you need to decide which to use; they are recognised as different keys, though you can't see the difference in that pane.
    enter image description here


  • Launch your first app. This will be its new home...

    Right click it in the Dock > Options > This Desktop
    enter image description here

    Set the window size to whatever you require - just not fullscreen ;-)

    Option/clicking the green dot will maximise instead, or you can just drag the window from any edge or corner.

    Repeat for your other apps.



You can change which Space any app occupies [or even single window, temporarily] by holding its title bar & hitting the key combo for the Space you want to go.



Key combos are faster than swiping or using control/arrow. Literally faster, the animation is double-speed plus you can go straight from 1 to 6 etc.



No more need for fullscreen apps, the menu bar will stay where it belongs. All you need to do is remember which numbered Space belongs to which app [or app 'set' you can have as many as you like if you manually tile them.

I tend to keep mine in sets, related apps on one Space, or if they need more room, on consecutive spaces.



One thing to note - fullscreen apps don't have a Space number, so you cannot use this method with them. Best you can get is to jump to the Space before, then swipe one to the right... yet another reason I avoid them entirely.



This is my 'home' Space 1... [pic shrunk to tiny] with Safari, Finder, Calendar, Messages, System Prefs & Activity Monitor - all ready to go.
enter image description here



One more thing...



For the sake of your sanity - disable Automatically rearrange Spaces & Displays have separate Spaces in System Prefs > Mission Control



enter image description here



Now you're in control of where every app lives & how quickly you can get there... and you get to keep the menu bar.

If you ever did want rid of the menu bar but keep the rest of this arrangement working as-is, it can be toggled in System Prefs > General - Automatically hide & show the menu bar; you just can't do the reverse for fullscreen apps.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    holy crap that was so detailed! thank you :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:24











  • Welcome. As a working method I reckon in two weeks you'll have forgotten what a nightmare fullscreen apps used to be ;)

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:26











  • haha i hope so. couple of questions, can you rename the desktops somehow? Desktop 1, Desktop 2 etc, isnt so helpful. Also can you make the dock hide on specific desktops, and not on the main/first desktop?

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:32













  • You just remember the numbers, you can't rename them. It's a very shallow learning curve, though - & unfortunately, all Dock behaviour is global, it auto-hides or not, depending on how it's set, same in every space

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:34











  • Ok cool, thanks so much for all the help :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:36
















12














TL:DR - Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar.



In detail...




  • Launch Mission Control.

    from the Dock,

    from a trackpad: Swipe up using three or four fingers.

    From the keyboard: Press the Mission Control key [F3]. Or, press Control-Up Arrow.
    enter image description here

    You probably only have one to start with

    Move your cursor up to it & it will expand...
    enter image description here

    Click the + sign to add more Spaces [I faked the + closer in photoshop, it will be extreme right]
    You can change the desktop background later if you like, same way as changing it on your first Space.


  • Move to one of your new Spaces.

    3-finger swipe, activate Mission Control & click one, or set up hotkeys.

    System Prefs > Keyboard > Shortcuts > Mission Control.

    By default these are set to Ctrl ⌃ [number] but aren't activated.

    [They're also set to the numbers above qwerty. if you have a 10-key numpad, you need to decide which to use; they are recognised as different keys, though you can't see the difference in that pane.
    enter image description here


  • Launch your first app. This will be its new home...

    Right click it in the Dock > Options > This Desktop
    enter image description here

    Set the window size to whatever you require - just not fullscreen ;-)

    Option/clicking the green dot will maximise instead, or you can just drag the window from any edge or corner.

    Repeat for your other apps.



You can change which Space any app occupies [or even single window, temporarily] by holding its title bar & hitting the key combo for the Space you want to go.



Key combos are faster than swiping or using control/arrow. Literally faster, the animation is double-speed plus you can go straight from 1 to 6 etc.



No more need for fullscreen apps, the menu bar will stay where it belongs. All you need to do is remember which numbered Space belongs to which app [or app 'set' you can have as many as you like if you manually tile them.

I tend to keep mine in sets, related apps on one Space, or if they need more room, on consecutive spaces.



One thing to note - fullscreen apps don't have a Space number, so you cannot use this method with them. Best you can get is to jump to the Space before, then swipe one to the right... yet another reason I avoid them entirely.



This is my 'home' Space 1... [pic shrunk to tiny] with Safari, Finder, Calendar, Messages, System Prefs & Activity Monitor - all ready to go.
enter image description here



One more thing...



For the sake of your sanity - disable Automatically rearrange Spaces & Displays have separate Spaces in System Prefs > Mission Control



enter image description here



Now you're in control of where every app lives & how quickly you can get there... and you get to keep the menu bar.

If you ever did want rid of the menu bar but keep the rest of this arrangement working as-is, it can be toggled in System Prefs > General - Automatically hide & show the menu bar; you just can't do the reverse for fullscreen apps.






share|improve this answer





















  • 1





    holy crap that was so detailed! thank you :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:24











  • Welcome. As a working method I reckon in two weeks you'll have forgotten what a nightmare fullscreen apps used to be ;)

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:26











  • haha i hope so. couple of questions, can you rename the desktops somehow? Desktop 1, Desktop 2 etc, isnt so helpful. Also can you make the dock hide on specific desktops, and not on the main/first desktop?

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:32













  • You just remember the numbers, you can't rename them. It's a very shallow learning curve, though - & unfortunately, all Dock behaviour is global, it auto-hides or not, depending on how it's set, same in every space

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:34











  • Ok cool, thanks so much for all the help :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:36














12












12








12







TL:DR - Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar.



In detail...




  • Launch Mission Control.

    from the Dock,

    from a trackpad: Swipe up using three or four fingers.

    From the keyboard: Press the Mission Control key [F3]. Or, press Control-Up Arrow.
    enter image description here

    You probably only have one to start with

    Move your cursor up to it & it will expand...
    enter image description here

    Click the + sign to add more Spaces [I faked the + closer in photoshop, it will be extreme right]
    You can change the desktop background later if you like, same way as changing it on your first Space.


  • Move to one of your new Spaces.

    3-finger swipe, activate Mission Control & click one, or set up hotkeys.

    System Prefs > Keyboard > Shortcuts > Mission Control.

    By default these are set to Ctrl ⌃ [number] but aren't activated.

    [They're also set to the numbers above qwerty. if you have a 10-key numpad, you need to decide which to use; they are recognised as different keys, though you can't see the difference in that pane.
    enter image description here


  • Launch your first app. This will be its new home...

    Right click it in the Dock > Options > This Desktop
    enter image description here

    Set the window size to whatever you require - just not fullscreen ;-)

    Option/clicking the green dot will maximise instead, or you can just drag the window from any edge or corner.

    Repeat for your other apps.



You can change which Space any app occupies [or even single window, temporarily] by holding its title bar & hitting the key combo for the Space you want to go.



Key combos are faster than swiping or using control/arrow. Literally faster, the animation is double-speed plus you can go straight from 1 to 6 etc.



No more need for fullscreen apps, the menu bar will stay where it belongs. All you need to do is remember which numbered Space belongs to which app [or app 'set' you can have as many as you like if you manually tile them.

I tend to keep mine in sets, related apps on one Space, or if they need more room, on consecutive spaces.



One thing to note - fullscreen apps don't have a Space number, so you cannot use this method with them. Best you can get is to jump to the Space before, then swipe one to the right... yet another reason I avoid them entirely.



This is my 'home' Space 1... [pic shrunk to tiny] with Safari, Finder, Calendar, Messages, System Prefs & Activity Monitor - all ready to go.
enter image description here



One more thing...



For the sake of your sanity - disable Automatically rearrange Spaces & Displays have separate Spaces in System Prefs > Mission Control



enter image description here



Now you're in control of where every app lives & how quickly you can get there... and you get to keep the menu bar.

If you ever did want rid of the menu bar but keep the rest of this arrangement working as-is, it can be toggled in System Prefs > General - Automatically hide & show the menu bar; you just can't do the reverse for fullscreen apps.






share|improve this answer















TL:DR - Set up half a dozen Spaces. Set each app to open in its own Space. Switch using hotkeys [or swipe]. Bye bye fullscreen apps. Hello menu bar.



In detail...




  • Launch Mission Control.

    from the Dock,

    from a trackpad: Swipe up using three or four fingers.

    From the keyboard: Press the Mission Control key [F3]. Or, press Control-Up Arrow.
    enter image description here

    You probably only have one to start with

    Move your cursor up to it & it will expand...
    enter image description here

    Click the + sign to add more Spaces [I faked the + closer in photoshop, it will be extreme right]
    You can change the desktop background later if you like, same way as changing it on your first Space.


  • Move to one of your new Spaces.

    3-finger swipe, activate Mission Control & click one, or set up hotkeys.

    System Prefs > Keyboard > Shortcuts > Mission Control.

    By default these are set to Ctrl ⌃ [number] but aren't activated.

    [They're also set to the numbers above qwerty. if you have a 10-key numpad, you need to decide which to use; they are recognised as different keys, though you can't see the difference in that pane.
    enter image description here


  • Launch your first app. This will be its new home...

    Right click it in the Dock > Options > This Desktop
    enter image description here

    Set the window size to whatever you require - just not fullscreen ;-)

    Option/clicking the green dot will maximise instead, or you can just drag the window from any edge or corner.

    Repeat for your other apps.



You can change which Space any app occupies [or even single window, temporarily] by holding its title bar & hitting the key combo for the Space you want to go.



Key combos are faster than swiping or using control/arrow. Literally faster, the animation is double-speed plus you can go straight from 1 to 6 etc.



No more need for fullscreen apps, the menu bar will stay where it belongs. All you need to do is remember which numbered Space belongs to which app [or app 'set' you can have as many as you like if you manually tile them.

I tend to keep mine in sets, related apps on one Space, or if they need more room, on consecutive spaces.



One thing to note - fullscreen apps don't have a Space number, so you cannot use this method with them. Best you can get is to jump to the Space before, then swipe one to the right... yet another reason I avoid them entirely.



This is my 'home' Space 1... [pic shrunk to tiny] with Safari, Finder, Calendar, Messages, System Prefs & Activity Monitor - all ready to go.
enter image description here



One more thing...



For the sake of your sanity - disable Automatically rearrange Spaces & Displays have separate Spaces in System Prefs > Mission Control



enter image description here



Now you're in control of where every app lives & how quickly you can get there... and you get to keep the menu bar.

If you ever did want rid of the menu bar but keep the rest of this arrangement working as-is, it can be toggled in System Prefs > General - Automatically hide & show the menu bar; you just can't do the reverse for fullscreen apps.







share|improve this answer














share|improve this answer



share|improve this answer








edited Mar 11 '17 at 7:27

























answered Mar 11 '17 at 7:14









TetsujinTetsujin

15.8k53462




15.8k53462








  • 1





    holy crap that was so detailed! thank you :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:24











  • Welcome. As a working method I reckon in two weeks you'll have forgotten what a nightmare fullscreen apps used to be ;)

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:26











  • haha i hope so. couple of questions, can you rename the desktops somehow? Desktop 1, Desktop 2 etc, isnt so helpful. Also can you make the dock hide on specific desktops, and not on the main/first desktop?

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:32













  • You just remember the numbers, you can't rename them. It's a very shallow learning curve, though - & unfortunately, all Dock behaviour is global, it auto-hides or not, depending on how it's set, same in every space

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:34











  • Ok cool, thanks so much for all the help :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:36














  • 1





    holy crap that was so detailed! thank you :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:24











  • Welcome. As a working method I reckon in two weeks you'll have forgotten what a nightmare fullscreen apps used to be ;)

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:26











  • haha i hope so. couple of questions, can you rename the desktops somehow? Desktop 1, Desktop 2 etc, isnt so helpful. Also can you make the dock hide on specific desktops, and not on the main/first desktop?

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:32













  • You just remember the numbers, you can't rename them. It's a very shallow learning curve, though - & unfortunately, all Dock behaviour is global, it auto-hides or not, depending on how it's set, same in every space

    – Tetsujin
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:34











  • Ok cool, thanks so much for all the help :)

    – Matthew Prasinov
    Mar 11 '17 at 7:36








1




1





holy crap that was so detailed! thank you :)

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 7:24





holy crap that was so detailed! thank you :)

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 7:24













Welcome. As a working method I reckon in two weeks you'll have forgotten what a nightmare fullscreen apps used to be ;)

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 7:26





Welcome. As a working method I reckon in two weeks you'll have forgotten what a nightmare fullscreen apps used to be ;)

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 7:26













haha i hope so. couple of questions, can you rename the desktops somehow? Desktop 1, Desktop 2 etc, isnt so helpful. Also can you make the dock hide on specific desktops, and not on the main/first desktop?

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 7:32







haha i hope so. couple of questions, can you rename the desktops somehow? Desktop 1, Desktop 2 etc, isnt so helpful. Also can you make the dock hide on specific desktops, and not on the main/first desktop?

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 7:32















You just remember the numbers, you can't rename them. It's a very shallow learning curve, though - & unfortunately, all Dock behaviour is global, it auto-hides or not, depending on how it's set, same in every space

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 7:34





You just remember the numbers, you can't rename them. It's a very shallow learning curve, though - & unfortunately, all Dock behaviour is global, it auto-hides or not, depending on how it's set, same in every space

– Tetsujin
Mar 11 '17 at 7:34













Ok cool, thanks so much for all the help :)

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 7:36





Ok cool, thanks so much for all the help :)

– Matthew Prasinov
Mar 11 '17 at 7:36





protected by Community Feb 8 at 3:36



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