Archive for the ‘control’ Category

Killing Finder or Dock (or any other mac OS X application)

Wednesday, March 11th, 2009

When an application in OS X is stalling on you and you have given up on regaining control of it, the best thing to do is kill it before it takes down your whole machine. Usually you would right click on the application icon in the Dock and choose the menu item “Quit” or “Force Quit” if available and that should do the trick.

Dock Menu When Right Clicking Application

Dock Menu When Right Clicking Application

Or you could click on the top left corner “apple” icon which will bring up a menu where you will see something called “Force Quit”. Choosing that option will open a small window with a list of the running applications which you can forcibly kill.

Force Quit Applications

Force Quit Applications

Sometimes though a key component of OS X fails on you which you don’t have an option to force quit like the above mentioned methods. I came to such a situation when the Dock froze on me the other day. It just would not come up at all. Today I had a similar situation when I had cover flow switched on in the finder while I was browsing an external hard drive that has 20 gigs of hundreds of subfolders inside hundreds of subfolders that contain thousands of photos. Cover flow could not handle this and it wouldn’t allow me to do antyhing else either. I had an application crunching data for the past 5 hours so restarting the machine was definitely not an option. I needed a way to cleanly kill Finder without destroying any other work going on. In situations like this you need to go beyond the GUI and directly to the terminal. Yes, I know, now that I am writing this article, I noticed that the “Force Quit” application actually has Finder as an option but being someone from a linux background I immediately go to Terminal for anything I need rather than look for GUI solutions.

What you need to do is find the PID (Process ID) of the application you need to kill. To do this, type the following in Terminal:

ps aux | grep Finder

The result of that command will be something like:

sergemadenian   131 97.1 25.9  1213744 542124   ??  R    Fri12PM  54:49.70 /System/Library/CoreServices/Finder.app/Contents/MacOS/Finder -psn_0_40970
sergemadenian  3932   0.1  0.0   590472    192 s000  R+   10:07PM   0:00.00 grep Finder

“ps aux” is the command that prints out all the currently running processes from all users. ” | grep Finder” will restrict the results of the “ps” command to show only the lines that contain the word “Finder”.

From the above result you can tell that the Finder application is question is the first line and I have set the PID in Bold and red “131″. You can also tell that this process is struggling because immediately after the pid we see the CPU and memory usage which in this case is “97.1 25.9″ (those are percentages).

Now that we know the PID (131) all you need to do is run the command:

kill -9 131

“-9″ tells the OS to kill immediately. That took care of the offending Finder window and I noticed that a new Finder process had been kicked off by the OS. If a new process had not automatically been kicked off, I would have had to start it manually by running the command that was running before which I’ve marked in blue and bold ”

Same process applies to any application including the Dock. All you need to do is find the specific PID by changing what you filter with grep. For the Dock as an example, you will need to run:

ps aux | grep Dock

Remember that the PID is not a universal number (that is your Finder application will not have 131, even my computer will have a different PID for Finder when I restart it) so you need to always find the unique PID running at the time.

Disabling Skype and other application that run on startup

Saturday, February 28th, 2009

Here’s another post that will be a short one for mac OS X. The best way to control what will run on startup is to go to System Preferences -> Accounts Pick the user you want to modify the startup list for and choose the “Login Items” tab. You should see something like this:

Account Login Items

Account Login Items

At this point just pick the application you want to stop running on startup and click on the “-” sign to remove it from the list.

Useful Macbook Keyboard Shortcuts

Wednesday, October 22nd, 2008

While using the macbook I’ve picked up a few keyboard shortcuts that I now use all the time. Here is a list of them:

  1. Command+tab: to switch between different applications. This is similar to window’s alt+tab. You can hold down the command button and press/release tab and a prompt will come up to show you all the currently open programs. If you press and release the tab button it will then go to the next program and so on until you find the one you want and you let the command button go. This is extremely useful when you have multiple applications open and switching between them often. The biggest difference between windows and linux is that you switch between different application and not different windows of an application. For example if you have three different windows of firefox open comman+tab will not switch between those windows whereas alt+tab on other systems will. Mac OS X has a different keyboard shortcut to accomplish just that and it’s the next on the list.
  2. Command+~: Switching between different windows of the same application. Just as the case specified above, when you have three windows of firefox open and you want to switch between then, you just use the command+~ shortcut.
  3. Command+C: Copy.
  4. Command+V: Paste.
  5. Command+X: Cut.
  6. Command+Q: Quit the current application. This is similar to pressing Alt+F4 on a windows machine but the greatest difference is that with Alt+F4 you only close the current window or instance of that application you are looking at, whereas with Command+Q you are quitting the whole application. If we continue our example of having three firefox windows open, on a windows machine Alt+F4 will close the current window and when you are at the last window it will quit the whole application. On a macbook Command+Q will wuit the application closing all three windows at once. Just like Command+Tab there is a window specific shortcut and that is next.
  7. Command+W: Close only the current window of an application. This key is what is probably the closest to Alt+F4 on a windows machine because it will close the current window of the application you are on. Unlike windows’ shortcut though it will not quit the application if you close the last window. You will notice that the application is still showing as active in the Dock as well as the menu bar showing up at the top. If we follow the firefox example, closing the last window will still keep firefox open and you could open firefox again very fast because it’s still running in memory. You could use the next shortcut to open the new widnow.
  8. Command+N: Open a new window of the application. This is application specific.
  9. Command+Space: Open the spotlight prompt. You can use spotlight to find any files or even start up an application for you. Once you get used to this you will see that you rarely use finder or even the Dock to start your application. you want to open up firefox, just press Command+Space and then start typing the name “fire” you won’t even need to finish it and you’ll see firefox come up in the list. Use the arrow keys to go up and down the list to highlight the firefox Application and press enter.
  10. Command+Shift+3 and Command+Shift+4: Take a screenshot. For more information look at our screen capture post.
  11. Shift+Fn+Left Arrow: Home. This works in different ways on different application. I use terminal a lot and in terminal it will be like pressing “Home” on a keyboard and go to the beginning of the command. In other applications I’ve seen it go to the top of the text (like this input box in the browser jumps to the first character). In other applications you also don’t need to press the Shift key but you do in terminal.
    (Edit: Peter Morgan recently posted a comment pointing out that point 11, 12 and 13 do not need the Shift key to work if you are using Mac OS X 10.5.6. Thank you Peter for the info )
  12. Shift+Fn+Right Arrow: End. Works the same way as the home button.
  13. Shift+Fn+Up Arrow or Down Arrow: Page Up and Page Down respectively. Works the same way as the home button
  14. Fn+Delete: Delete. The way the delete button alone works is more commonly known as backspace in other systems, it will delete the text found right behind (to the left of) the cursor. To delete the text found in front (to the right of) the cursor you need to press Fn+Delete.
  15. Fn+FX where X is a number between 1 and 12: Issues that function key as pressed. You will notice that the Function keys (F1, F2, … F12) have other uses like dimming the screen, controlling the speaker, starting spaces or expose and so on. Sometimes though you just want to press the F1 button, in those cases you need to use it in conjunction with the Fn key.
  16. Ctrl+Eject: Brings up the shutdown prompt to easily issue a shutdown or restart command.
  17. Command+Home: Go to beginning of the line.
  18. Command+End: Go to end of the line.
  19. Command+Up Arrow (Page Up): Go to beginning of file.
  20. Command+Down Arrow (Page Down): Go to end of file.

These are the most common keyboard shortcuts that I use and can think of right now. Let me know if you have a favorite one and I’ll add that to the list.

Cool Mac OS X Feature: Zooming

Friday, June 15th, 2007

Here’s a feature I didn’t know the macbook had until I saw someone using it and asked them how they did it. One of the accessibility features of the macbook is zooming. I’ve seen this in other operating systems where a box comes up next to the mouse with a zoomed in view around the mouse pointer. On the macbook, if you have accessibility turned on, you can zoom into the desktop by pressing and holding the “CTRL” key and then using two fingers on the trackpad, next to each other, move your fingers up towards the monitor. You will immediately notice the screen has now zoomed in. Unfortunately, taking a screenshot doesn’t really show the zoomed in effect properly.

Once you have zoomed in, moving the mouse/trackpad will make it seem like you are dragging the entire screen. And when you don’t need to be zoomed in anymore, press “CTRL” key and with both fingers on the trackpad move down (away from the monitor) until the screen is back to normal.

You can enable and disable the zooming feature by going to System Preferences -> Universal Access and change the Zoom setting to off. You can also change which keys will zoom in and out and even have a hot key to turn zooming on or off.

Total loss of CTRL

Tuesday, May 22nd, 2007

Using the macbook for the first time you immediately realize the CTRL key doesn’t control much. I use keyboard shortcuts most of the time, it saves me a lot of time that would be wasted moving my right hand to and from the mouse. The most common of those shortcuts are: ctrl-C, ctrl-V, ctrl-D, ctrl-Z, ctrl-Y. Taking out the mac for a test drive your instinct tells you to use CTRL-C to copy something but nothing happens. Next step was to figure out what the shortcuts are. I used the mouse to go to the menu and check out the shortcuts next to each item. I noticed that everything uses that key with the apple logo and a weird symbol on it.

Edit Menu

It’s called the command key and all the windows and linux shortcuts are pretty much the same except you use command instead of CTRL. so copying would be command + C and so on.

I also went digging a little more online to find other shortcuts. In windows you can press Alt+F4 to close windows and when all windows are closed it brings up the “shut down computer” dialog. Command-F4 didn’t do anything. The following page helped me a lot in learning shortcuts:

Mac OS X keyboard shortcuts [Apple]

to bring up the shutdown dialog box you need to hold down Control + Eject for a second or two. What I cannot figure out yet is how to move between the different choices in a dialog box.

Shutdown dialog box
In the image above, shut down is selected and if I press the enter key, the computer will shut down. What if I wanted to restart? on linux and windows you can use the arrow keys or the tab key to switch focus. I haven’t been ablet o figure out how to do that on Mac OS X. If anyone knows, please post a comment.