![]() You might find it easier to get your bearings that way. Coolly enough, though, you can set a different wallpaper photo (desktop photo) to each Space. From this menu, choose Options→Assign To→All Desktops. To do that, hold the mouse button down on the program’s Dock icon until the shortcut menu appears. Or maybe your calendar app, your browser, or your email program. The Finder and System Preferences are great examples. Sometimes, though, you might want one app’s windows on all your desktops-perhaps because you use it so often, you want it always with you. Usually, you slap each app (or each window) onto only one Spaces desktop. ![]() ![]() The Mac whisks that app’s windows from whatever other screen they’re on to this screen. Hold your mouse down on the app’s Dock icon from the shortcut menu, choose Options→Assign To→This Desktop. After about a second, the adjacent screen slides into view you’ve just moved the window. Stay there with the mouse button still down. But there are two faster ways.įirst, you can drag a window (using its title bar as a handle) all the way to the edge of the screen. ![]() Of course, you can always move a window to a different Space by dragging its tiny icon within Mission Control. When you use one of the gestures or keystrokes for switching Spaces, you affect the Spaces on only one monitor: the one that contains your cursor at the moment. If “Displays have separate Spaces” is turned on in the Mission Control panel of System Preferences ( Figure 4-13), then each monitor has its own set of Spaces. If you have a second monitor connected to your Mac (or even several), each one can have its own set of Spaces. Put it off to the right of the other Spaces, for all Apple cares. If you’ve decided to turn on the Dashboard as a Space, as described later in this chapter, you can even drag the Dashboard out of its traditional left-side position. But it’ll be here when you’re ready for it. It’s still what most people would consider an advanced feature, and it’s definitely confusing at first. But the Mac was the first to make it a standard feature of a consumer operating system. Now, virtual screens aren’t a new idea-this sort of software has been available for years. These desktops are also essential to OS X’s full-screen apps feature, because each full-screen app gets its own Spaces desktop. You can also have the same program running on multiple screens-but with different documents or projects open on each one. On Screen 3: your web browser in Full Screen mode. Screen 2 can hold Photoshop, with an open document and the palettes carefully arrayed. Screen 1 might contain your email and chat windows, arranged just the way you like them. You can dedicate each one to a different program or kind of program. You see only one at a time you switch using Mission Control or a gesture.īut just because the Spaces screens are simulated doesn’t mean they’re not useful. They exist only in the Mac’s little head. Ordinarily, of course, attaching so many screens to a single computer would be a massively expensive proposition, not to mention detrimental to your living space and personal relationships.įortunately, Spaces monitors are virtual. Mission Control’s other star feature, Spaces, gives you up to 16 full-size monitors.
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