Tips and Help

4 Ways to Force-quit a Frozen Mac App

tip frozen app force quit

Even with the best Mac apps… freezes, crashes, hangs… they happen. What do you do when your favorite Mac app crashes or freezes? Force quit it. When you force quit an app, it forces the app to quit when it does not want to. Now when you do this, there is a chance that any unsaved changes will be lost, so you’ll want to use this as a last case scenario when having an issue with an app.

Here are four ways you can force-quit an app that’s not responding:

  1. Click the Apple menu in the upper right hand corner of your display and choose Force Quit (or press Command-Option-Escape), select the offending app, and click Force Quit.
  2. Option-right-click (or Control-Option-click) the frozen app’s Dock icon and choose Force Quit (this is how I usually force quit an app).
  3. To force-quit the frontmost app immediately, press Command-Shift-Option-Escape.
  4. Open Activity Monitor, select the process in the list, click the X button on the toolbar, and click Force Quit.

If one method doesn’t work, try it a second time, and if that doesn’t work, try another. If nothing works, restart your Mac. Remember that you may lose unsaved changes when force-quitting an app.

Tips and Help

Peek inside Files and Folders on Your Mac with Quick Look

Quick Look Desktop photo
Have you ever found yourself wanting to take a quick look at the contents of a file? Sometimes Finder icons hint at their file’s contents, but if you find yourself opening file after file to look at the contents quickly, the Mac has a little-known feature just for you: Quick Look. With Quick Look you can see the contents of a file without ever opening it. To give it a try, find a file in your Finder, click it once to select it, don’t open it, just select it. Now that the file is selected, press the Space bar. If it’s a supported type of file, Quick Look displays a window showing the contents of the file. Press the Space bar again to close the window.

Quick Look Excel

How does this work with a document that has multiple pages? With a document with multiple pages you’ll see thumbnails that you can scroll through using your mouse or trackpad, or by pressing the Page Up/Page Down keys. But you aren’t limited to just viewing a file: you can also open or share the file with Quick Look. Click the Open With button to open the file in its default app, or click the Share button in the upper right to send the file to someone else via email, Messages, or another sharing service.

If you need to scan through a set of files in a folder, you can navigate between them using the arrow keys while the Quick Look window remains open—how you move among the files depends on the Finder window’s view. In List view, for instance, using the Up and Down arrow keys can be a great way to browse through a collection of pictures. You can even interact with the Finder while using Quick Look, which means you can delete an unwanted photo by pressing Command-Delete while previewing it. I use this quite a bit on my Mac when I need to go through a folder full of files.

Quick Look also works well for comparing multiple similar files. All you need to do is select a number of files and then press the Space bar to open them all in Quick Look. To cycle through your selection, you use the Left and Right arrow keys; there are also Forward and Back buttons that appear near the top left of the Quick Look window. Next to those buttons is a Thumbnail button that displays the selected files in a grid—click any thumbnail to focus on just that item. To remove the distraction of your Desktop, click the Zoom button in a Quick Look window. You can start a slideshow from there. Another way to get to a zoomed Quick Look window is to select the files in the Finder and then press Option-Space.

Quick Look Penguins

Quick Look will not let you look at every file type, but out of the box, Quick Look supports text files, RTF files, HTML files, images, audio, video, PDFs, iWork documents, Microsoft Office files, and even fonts. Third-party apps can extend Quick Look to support proprietary formats, too, and developers have even released independent Quick Look generators, as they’re called.

Although it’s used mostly in the Finder, Quick Look is available elsewhere. For example, if you’re in an Open dialog, you can select a file and press the Space bar to preview it right there, another feature I use quite a bit. When restoring a file in Time Machine, use Quick Look to see if it’s the version you want. You can also preview an attachment in Messages by selecting it and pressing the Space bar.

Finally, note that if your Mac has a newer Apple trackpad, such as the Magic Trackpad 2, you can invoke Quick Look by force-touching a Finder icon (press deeply until you feel a click) instead of pressing the Space bar.

Quick Look takes just a moment to learn, but it can save you hours of time poring through files on your Mac! It’s well worth the investment time to learn how to use Quick Look.

Tips and Help

Silence or Mute Audio-playing Tabs in Safari

Tip mute audio Safari

Do Web sites that auto-play videos or ads drive you mad? They do me. Especially when I reopen Safari and several of tabs that I had open earlier open back up and the ads or videos start playing again. Since OS X 10.11 El Capitan, Safari can put an end to this on your Mac. If you have multiple tabs open, whenever audio is playing in a tab, an audio icon appears next to the name of the tab and at the right of Safari’s Smart Search field. To mute the audio in a tab with this audio icon, just click on the audio icon. If you’ve ended up with multiple tabs playing, you can mute all those except the current tab by Option-clicking either of those audio icons. And, finally, click and hold the audio icon in the Smart Search field for a menu with Mute and Unmute commands, and a list of all tabs that contain audio. I hope the tip helps!

Tip mute audio Safari

Tips and Help

Speed Up Mac and iOS Typing with Text Expansion or Text Replacement

Tip-Text-Expansion

The keyboard we’ve been using on our Macs, iPad, and iPhone have been around for 150 years! This is the same keyboard layout from the world’s first practical typewriter. But for most, we haven’t improved as typists, nor do we enjoy typing more – I certainly don’t. So what do we do now? We increasingly abbreviate to avoid typing, hence “CUL8R.” Text messaging aside, wouldn’t it be nice to be able to type less without compromising meaning or making your text look like it was composed by a teenager? Thanks to text expansion features built into the Mac and iOS, and extended with third-party utilities, you can.

For basic text expansion capabilities on the Mac, look in System Preferences > Keyboard > Text, and in iOS, go to Settings > General > Keyboard > Text Replacement. For both, you can enter a phrase and a shortcut that expands into that phrase when typed and followed by a space or punctuation character. (Tip: If text expansion doesn’t work in a Mac app like Mail or Safari, make sure Edit > Substitutions > Text Replacement is selected.)

If you’re signed into the same iCloud account on both your Mac and your iPhone, for instance, the text expansions sync between them automatically. So, you can type omw and tap the Space bar to get “On my way!” typed out for you, regardless of what device you’re using. (Another tip: don’t create abbreviations that you’ll also want to type normally. It might seem like a good idea to use mm for “Martin Marietta,” but that will get in the way of talking about 35mm film.)

Tip Text Expansion

Here are some ideas for the kinds of things you might want to turn over to your computer for typing:

  • Long or complex words or phrases, such as scientific names or signatures.
  • Your address, phone number, and email address.
  • Boilerplate text for common email replies.
  • Special characters, so blb could expand to the British pound symbol £.

So think about what bit of text you might want to expand automatically and give text expansion a try today!

I do have a few video lessons showing how this works on the Mac, iPad, and iPhone. You must be a Premium Member to watch the videos.

Keyboard Settings on the Mac
Text Replacement on the iPad
Text Replacement on the iPhone

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Tips and Help

Text Navigation Shortcuts for the Mac You Must Know

Tip Mac Keyboard Shortcuts

You may know that you can move the cursor or insertion point when working with text using your Mac’s arrow keys. But did you know that the Mac offers several shortcuts that let you move around even faster?

In most apps, hold down the Option key when using the left/right arrow keys to move left or right by a word. Use Command and the left/right arrow keys to jump to the beginning or end of the current line. Using Option and the up/down arrow keys moves the insertion point to the beginning or end of the current paragraph. And modifying the up/down arrow keys with Command takes you to the top or bottom of the entire document. Even better, add Shift to any of the above to select text from the current point to where you navigate to, so Shift-Option-Up arrow selects all the text from the insertion point to the beginning of the paragraph.

You may have to force yourself to remember some of thes, but it pays off. I use most of these on a daily basis. Start with learning just a couple shortcuts, then add more down the road. You will not regret it and you’ll wonder how you worked without them!

Tip Mac Keyboard Shortcuts

Tips and Help

New Tutor Tip: How to hide the Menu Bar on a Mac

Tutor Tip: Hide Menu Bar

 

I have another Tutor Tip for you. In this tutor Tip I take a look at how you can hide the Menu Bar without going into full screen mode on a Mac. I also look at how you can make the Menu Bar and Dock darker.

If you want to see who to hide the Menu Bar on your Mac, take a look at the latest Tutor Tip.

Tips and Help

New Tutor Tip: How to quickly show your desktop on a Mac

Tutor Tip: Show Desktop on a Mac



In our latest Tutor Tip we show you a couple ways you can quickly show your desktop on your Mac when you have numerous windows open. We show you how to show the desktop using a keyboard shortcut and using hot corners with the cursor. If you store files and folders on your desktop and you need to get at them quickly, this Tutor Tip is for you.

Show me how to quickly show my desktop on my Mac.

Tips and Help

New Free Tutor Tip: How to Quickly Turn on Do Not Disturb on a Mac

Tutor Tip - Do not Disturb

We have another free Tutor Tip ready for you. In this Tutor Tip we look at how we can always show the scroll bar in a window in macOS. I’ll use this quite a bit when I am recording my lessons as I do not want to receive any notifications while recording.

Learn how to quickly turn on Do Not Disturb on the Mac.

Tutor Tips for macOS

New Tutor Tip: How to always show the scroll bar on a Mac

Tutor Tip - Scroll Bar
We have another Tutor Tip ready for you. In this Tutor Tip we look at how we can always display the scroll bar on a Mac instead of having it disappear when we move our cursor away from the right edge of a window.

Learn how to always show the scroll bar in a window on the Mac.

Tutor Tips for macOS

New Tutor Tip: How to upload photos using the Photos Browser

Photos Browser

In this Tutor Tip we look at how we can upload photos to websites, such as Snapfish, without exporting or even opening the Photos App. We upload them by using the Photos Browser. If you upload photos to different services such as Snapfish, this Tutor Tip is for you!

Learn how to upload photos to websites such as Snapfish with the Photos Browser.

Tutor Tips for macOS

New Tutor Tip: How do I format a flash drive on my Mac?

Format Flash Drive on a Mac

In our latest Tutor Tip we look at how you format a flash drive using Disk Utility on a Mac. This also is who you can format a standard hard drive.

Learn how to format your flash drive on your Mac.

Tutor Tips for macOS

Learn how to rename multiples files on your Mac.

Rename Multiple Files on a  Mac

In our latest Tutor Tip we look at how you can rename multiple files at the same time on a Mac. This is also known as Batch renaming.

Learn how to rename multiples files on your Mac.

Tutor Tips

New Tutor Tip: How do I lock a document in Mac OS X?

Tutor Tip Locking Files on a Mac

In our latest Tutor Tip we look at how you can lock a file in Mac OS X. When you lock a file, you can’t make any changes to it and if you try and delete it, Mac OS X will alert you that the file is locked. If you need to learn how to lock a file to protect it on your Mac, this Tutor Tip will show you how.

Take me to the Tutor Tip on how to lock a document in Mac OS X.

Tutor Tips

Tutor Tip: How do I hide my Notifications temporarily on my Mac?

Tutor Tip: Do Not Disturb

In this Tutor Tip we show you how you can turn off notifications temporarily on your Mac by turning on Do Not Disturb from the Notification Center. When you turn on Do Not Disturb, Mac OS X will temporarily hide your notifications until the next day when Do Not Disturb will be turned off automatically and you’ll start receiving your notifications again.

Take me to the Tutor Tip showing me how to hide my Notifications temporarily on my Mac!

Tutor Tips

Tutor Tip: How to show Hard Drives on the Mac Desktop

Show Hard Drive on Desktop

In our latest Tutor Tip we look at how we can show our hard drives, including external ones, on the Mac Desktop. If you need to access your hard drive a lot, this tip is for you!

Find how how to show your hard drives on your Mac desktop.