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Nov 16, 2010 WindowShade X provides an exciting and useful way of organizing your work on Mac OS X. With this handy tool, you can assign the following actions to the minimize button and a double-click on the window title: Minimize the window to the Dock, like always. (1) Before, (2) After How to Remove SkinPacks. If you find yourself getting tired of your theme and want to switch it up, you will first need to uninstall your previous SkinPack through the Programs list in Control Panel.However, if something went wrong with the install process and you are trying to get your PC back to normal, I'd recommend using the System Restore option.
Many people overuse the minimize button to get applications and windows out of the way. In most cases, it is more efficient to use the Hide command to simply hide the app. Hidden apps can be quickly and easy brough back and you won't clutter your Dock with minimized windows. Today using tabs in windows and autosave to easily quit and relaunch apps means you should rarely need the minimize button.Check out Use Hide Instead Of Minimize On Your Mac at YouTube for closed captioning and more options.
Related Video Tutorials: Hide Desktop Icons With an Automator App ― Create a Button On Your Mac or iPhone To Make a Call With One Tap Or Click ― Building an Automator Script To Snap Windows Into Position ― Managing a Video Library On Your Mac
How To Minimize Screen In Windows 10
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It does for me. I assume by clicking 'cmd-tab' you are seeing a bar across the screen and repeated tabbing moves the cursor to the hidden application. Yes, releasing the cmd key does restore the window for me. If it doesn't work for you I don't know why
Mac users dislike 'tasks', so the 'taskbar' is called a 'Dock'.
A 'hidden app' is one whose windows are invisible AND not minimised AND the application is not in front. Keystrokes only operate on the front app, so no keystroke could unhide an application that is not in front because no hidden app could be in front.
I believe all apps have a 'Show All' menu item in the menubar, under the application name. That should be better than a keystroke anyway.
Mac users dislike 'tasks', so the 'taskbar' is called a 'Dock'.
A 'hidden app' is one whose windows are invisible AND not minimised AND the application is not in front. Keystrokes only operate on the front app, so no keystroke could unhide an application that is not in front because no hidden app could be in front.
I believe all apps have a 'Show All' menu item in the menubar, under the application name. That should be better than a keystroke anyway.