![]() (Click the window, or the Dock icon, to close Exposé.)īecause the Dock is such a critical component of Mac OS X, Apple has decked it out with enough customization controls to keep you busy experimenting for months. This feature, new in Snow Leopard, is an extension of the Exposé feature described on Exposé: Death to Window Clutter. Hold the mouse button down on a program’s Dock icon to see mini versions of all that program’s open windows. A shortcut menu of useful commands pops right out. To see the menu, Control-click it or right-click it. See Organizing and Removing Dock Icons for details.Įach Dock icon sprouts a pop-up menu. ![]() When you click a folder’s icon, you get a pop-up arc of icons, or a grid or list of them, that indicates what’s inside. When you click a program’s icon, a tiny, bright, micro-spotlight dot appears under its icon to let you know it’s open. (You can’t remove the icon of a program that’s currently open, however.)Ĭlick something once to open it. ![]() Remove a Dock icon by dragging it away from the Dock, and enjoy the animated puff of smoke that appears when you release the mouse button. You can add a new icon to the Dock by dragging it there. Everything else goes on the right, including documents, folders, and disks. ![]()
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