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- §
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- §
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- åWindows and Dialogs
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- Virtual Desktop operates several windows and dialog boxes, which are
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- described here.
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- xThe Scroll Bar Windows
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- √ò
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- √ò
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- √ò
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- √ò
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- √ò
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- Virtual Desktop maintains one horizontal and one vertical scroll bar
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- window. If you use them while Virtual Desktop is already active, it will
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- remain active; otherwise, it will return to whatever application was
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- active before.
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- Through the Layout Preferences dialog, you can vary the thickness of the
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- scroll bars, and you can move the vertical scroll bar to the left side if
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- you wish. A left-handed arrangement is good for southpaws, but also
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- worth considering just because Finder tends to use the right side of the
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- desktop for things with no definite location, like volume icons and new
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- folders and documents.
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- Through the Usage Preferences dialog, you can make the scroll bar
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- windows persistent. By default, they disappear when Virtual Desktop
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- goes into the background.
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- xThe Anchor Window
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- This small window has the Virtual Desktop icon on it. Clicking once makes
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- it active, and clicking twice enters Full View mode. After that, clicking
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- toggles between Full View mode and the usual see-through mode.
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- xThe Full View Window
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- ‚àö‚åò
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- This window appears only in Full View mode, covering the area not
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- occupied by the menu bar and scroll bars. It consists of three parts:
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- picture, radio buttons, and list box.
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- • Picture
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- The picture is the most interesting part of the Full View window. It offers
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- many functions.
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- ° Backdrop
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- The Full View picture has a gray backdrop showing the current extent of
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- the virtual desktop, reduced to fit the area available for the picture
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- display. Through the Layout Preferences dialog, you have the option of a
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- flexible aspect ratio, which distorts images in the picture to fill the
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- available area, or a true aspect ratio, which scales all images without
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- distortion, but leaves some unused space in the picture, filled with a
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- darker gray or black.
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- The virtual desktop is padded in each direction by a factor which you can
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- adjust using the “Grow Desktop” and “Shrink Desktop” menu commands.
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- If you move a window or icon into the pad area, the virtual desktop will
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- grow automatically the next time the view is refreshed.
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- ° Desktop View
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- In the background, a white area describes the part of the virtual desktop
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- which is currently visible through the monitor or monitors, rather like
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- those “through the binoculars” shots in bad old movies. Anything resting
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- in the white area is the image of a visible window or icon. You can click
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- and drag this white area to another point on the virtual desktop, moving
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- the desktop view relative to all windows and icons. This is effectively a
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- diagonal form of scrolling. If you use the scroll bars, you will see the
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- white area move accordingly.
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- ° Window and Icon Images
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- Every window or desktop icon (collectively known as “items”) appears in
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- the picture as an outline rectangle with a representative size, shape, and
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- position. On a color monitor, the color of the rectangle matches that of
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- the owning application’s radio button, for easy recognition.
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- Where images overlap, the outline of the front item is solid, and the
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- others are hatched (cut diagonally). On a color monitor, the cursor
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- changes color as it passes over the images, to help you see which window
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- is in front at that point. With balloons showing, you can get detailed
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- information on what the mouse is pointing to.
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- The images of windows belonging to hidden applications appear as thin
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- dotted outlines. They don’t figure in the cursor or balloon behavior
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- described above unless the Option key is pressed.
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- The mechanism for selecting and dragging item images is a little unusual.
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- At any time, there may be only one item selected. Its image outline is
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- filled in. Even if that item is behind other items at some points, the
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- hand-shaped cursor tells you that you can click and drag that item from
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- any point to any other point, without making it active. By contrast, you
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- can also click and drag a non-selected item, without affecting the
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- selection, but the item dragged will be the one which is frontmost at the
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- click point.
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- An item becomes selected either by clicking on its image, or by actions on
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- the radio buttons or list box. The current selection is always reflected in
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- all three parts of the Full View window — picture, radio buttons, and list
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- box.
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- If you double-click on an item image, Virtual Desktop will make that
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- window or icon active, and go into the background. If the point where you
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- clicked was outside the white area, the desktop view will scroll
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- automatically to center the selected item on the main monitor. Likewise,
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- you can press the Return or Enter key to make the selected item active,
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- but scrolling will only occur if the item is completely outside the desktop
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- view.
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- The entire Full View window is a static display. It does not track the
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- movements, appearances, or disappearances of windows and icons. If
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- Virtual Desktop finds that an item has moved, disappeared, or changed its
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- title, the cursor shows a question mark while over the item’s image, and
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- you cannot do anything with the item. The “Refresh” menu command
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- clears up this situation, redrawing the entire window and repositioning
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- the scroll bars.
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- NOTE: The virtual desktop may sometimes become very large, and the
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- images very small, because some application has placed a window in a
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- very remote position. This is a technique some programmers use to hide
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- a window. If this becomes a problem, move the window’s image nearer to
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- the rest of the items, then use the “Refresh” menu command to rescale
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- the picture.
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- • Radio Buttons
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- The order of radio buttons from top to bottom is the same as the layering
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- order of the applications’ windows. However, applications without
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- windows do not appear. A special button labeled “Desktop icons” at the
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- bottom covers all desktop icons.
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- Each radio button is given a color to match the images in the picture. By
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- default, the color is computed by hashing the application’s signature, but
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- you can change it through the Application Preferences dialog.
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- Clicking on a radio button fills the list box with the titles of the
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- application’s windows (or desktop icons) and selects the front item in the
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- list and in the picture. You can use Shift-Up-Arrow and
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- Shift-Down-Arrow to go up and down the stack of radio buttons without
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- using the mouse.
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- When you are selecting items using images in the picture, the radio button
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- selection changes accordingly.
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- • List Box
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- The order of entries from top to bottom is the same as the layering order
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- of the selected application’s windows (or desktop icons).
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- Items without titles appear in the list as “[untitled]”. If an item moves,
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- disappears, or changes title, its entry in the list changes to “[moved]”,
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- “[defunct]”, or “[retitled]”.
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- You can use Up Arrow and Down Arrow to go up and down the list without
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- using the mouse. You can also select by typing the first few letters of an
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- item’s title.
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- If you double-click on a list entry, Virtual Desktop will make that window
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- or icon active, and go into the background. If the item is completely
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- outside the desktop view, the desktop view will scroll automatically to
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- center the selected item on the main monitor.
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- When you are selecting items using images in the picture, the list
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- selection changes accordingly.
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- xThe Door Icon Windows
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- Õ
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- Õ
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- Õ
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- Every door you define can have a small iconic window on the desktop,
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- which does not move when the virtual desktop scrolls. Each door icon
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- window carries the first few letters of the door’s name for identification,
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- and can have its own distinctive door and wall colors.
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- When you create a door, unless the default door preference option is not
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- to show door icon windows, Virtual Desktop prompts you to place the
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- window with a special door-shaped cursor. After you have placed the
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- window, you can move it by clicking and dragging. A good practice is to
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- reserve a small area in one corner of the main monitor, where door icon
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- windows can congregate and be visible regardless of which door is open.
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- Clicking once on the door icon window (without dragging) opens the door.
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- If you press the Option key while clicking, Virtual Desktop will ignore any
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- option to switch applications after opening the door, and will remain
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- active.
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- xThe About Dialog
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- This dialog presents Virtual Desktop’s About box. It is opened by the
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- “About Virtual Desktop…” command in the Apple menu.
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- It mentions, by way of a balloon, that Virtual Desktop offers help through
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- both Balloon Help and Help on Wheels. If you already have balloons
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- showing, Virtual Desktop spares you the balloon, figuring that you’ve
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- probably seen enough recently.
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- xThe Layout Preferences Dialog
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- This dialog appears when you select Layout… from the Preferences menu.
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- It lets you set options which affect the appearance of Virtual Desktop
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- windows.
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- • Orientation option
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- Choose a left- or right-handed orientation of Virtual Desktop windows
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- using the radio buttons. A left-handed orientation places the vertical
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- scroll bar at the left edge of the main monitor, and places the list box and
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- radio buttons at the left side of the Full View window.
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- The default is a right-handed orientation.
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- • Scroll Bar Thickness option
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- Depending on how much screen area you have to spare, and how accurate
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- you can be with your clicks, you may want to increase or decrease the
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- width of the scroll bars. Allowable values are between 4 and 64 pixels,
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- inclusive.
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- The default is for standard 16-pixel-wide scroll bars.
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- • Full View Sidebar Width option
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- If you have a large main monitor, you may want to give the Full View list
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- box and radio buttons more width in which to display item titles and
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- application names. Allowable values are between 64 and 256 pixels,
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- inclusive.
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- The default is for a 128-pixel-wide sidebar.
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- • Full View Desktop Aspect Ratio option
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- Choose a flexible or true aspect ratio for the Full View picture using the
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- radio buttons. A flexible aspect ratio distorts item images to maximize
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- coverage in the picture, while a true aspect ratio preserves the shape of
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- images and leaves dark gray or black gutters beside the virtual desktop
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- backdrop.
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- The default is to use a flexible desktop aspect ratio.
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- • Cancel
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- Click here to cancel the changes made to existing layout options.
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- • Use Defaults
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- Click here to change all options to their default values, the ones described
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- in this help file.
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- • OK
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- Click here to accept the options and close the dialog. This will
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- immediately change the Virtual Desktop window display.
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- If any options are invalid, you are prompted to correct them.
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- xThe Usage Preferences Dialog
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- This dialog appears when you select Usage… from the Preferences menu.
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- It lets you set options which affect how you can ask Virtual Desktop to
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- scroll the virtual desktop while it is in the background.
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- These options are not effective unless the Virtual Desktop application is
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- running.
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- • Use Key Combination option
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- If this option is in effect, Virtual Desktop will react to certain
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- keystrokes, even if it is in the background. Use the individual check
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- buttons to select one or more modifier keys (Command, Shift, Option,
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- Control) which must be down when the key is pressed. Click on one of the
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- four arms of the compass rose to change the key which causes Virtual
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- Desktop to scroll in that direction. (In this respect, keys on the numeric
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- keypad are distinct from the like-labeled keys on the main part of the
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- keyboard.)
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- NOTE: The active application will not see the keystroke if this option has
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- been set to react to it. If your key combination choices are obstructing
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- your use of some application, press the Caps Lock key, and try again.
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- This will cause Virtual Desktop to ignore the keystroke.
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- This option is separate from the built-in support for the Home, End, Page
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- Up, and Page Down keys, which work only while the Virtual Desktop
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- application is active.
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- This option works even if you are facing a modal dialog, the kind which
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- you must answer before you can do anything else. Sometimes you may
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- need it to get a look at a modal dialog box which has come up outside the
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- visible desktop area.
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- The default is a Shift-Control-Arrow combination for all four directions,
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- but the entire option is off by default.
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- • Move Mouse Pointer While Shift Key Pressed option
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- If this option is in effect, Virtual Desktop will track the mouse pointer
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- whenever the Shift key is pressed, and scroll the virtual desktop in the
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- direction of mouse movement. It is as if you have put your finger on the
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- desktop “blotter” holding all of the windows and icons, and pushed it
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- across the desk.
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- A blinking circle on the desktop marks the point where the pointer was
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- when the Shift key was pressed. This marker does not appear until you
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- have moved the pointer a certain distance, and disappears again if you
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- move it back. So, if you didn’t mean to shift the desktop, and you see a
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- blinking circle, you should extinguish it before releasing the Shift key.
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- When you release the Shift key, if the pointer has moved significantly,
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- Virtual Desktop will shift the desktop accordingly. Whatever was under
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- the blinking circle moves to the new mouse position, and everything else
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- with it.
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- Like the key combination option, this option works even if a modal dialog
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- is posted.
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- One trick you will have to learn if you use this option is how to do
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- Shift-drag selection in other applications without shifting the desktop.
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- The secret is in the ordering: Position the mouse, then press the Shift
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- key, then press the mouse button, then release the Shift key, then drag,
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- then release the mouse button. If you move the mouse before pressing its
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- button, or if you release the mouse button before the Shift key, you may
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- see the blinking circle, and will have to extinguish it by moving the
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- pointer back.
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- This option is off by default.
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- • Use Persistent Scroll Bars at Edge of Screen option
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- If this option is in effect, Virtual Desktop will not hide its scroll bar
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- windows when going into the background, so that they continue to be
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- available when Virtual Desktop is in the background. Virtual Desktop will
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- become active while the user operates the scroll bars, but will return to
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- the background afterwards.
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- This option does not work when a modal dialog is posted, because you can
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- only use the mouse within the dialog box.
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- This option is off by default.
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- • Cancel
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- Click here to cancel the changes made to existing usage options.
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- • Use Defaults
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- Click here to change all options to their default values, the ones described
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- in this help file.
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- • OK
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- Click here to accept the options and close the dialog.
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- If any options are invalid, you are prompted to correct them.
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- xThe Application Preferences Dialog
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- This dialog appears when you select Application… from the Preferences
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- menu. It lets you set options which affect the handling of the current
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- application’s windows (or desktop icons). The current application is the
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- one whose radio button is selected in the Full View window. This dialog is
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- not available outside of Full View mode.
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- • Color option
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- Click on the colored square to change the color used for the current
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- application’s radio button and for all of its item images in the picture.
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- The default is a color computed by hashing the application’s signature.
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- • Exempt Application’s Items From All Scrolling option
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- If this option is in effect, Virtual Desktop will not move the current
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- application’s windows (or desktop icons) when it scrolls the virtual
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- desktop. They retain their position in the desktop view, that is, they
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- stick to the monitor(s). This option is appropriate for utilities which
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- provide menu-bar-like functions, and for monitor programs like
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- PrintMonitor.
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- This option is off by default.
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- • Anchor Application’s Items to Door option
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- This option is not available if the Exempt Application’s Items From All
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- Scrolling option is on. It is also not applicable to desktop icons.
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- If the current application’s windows are usually confined to the home
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- area, you should choose “none” from the pop-up menu, meaning that
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- Virtual Desktop will leave the windows where they are on the virtual
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- desktop when quitting. If they happen to be outside the home area, they
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- may be inaccessible until you open Virtual Desktop again.
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- If the current application is usually associated with one door position, you
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- should choose that door from the pop-up menu. When Virtual Desktop
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- quits, it will move the current application’s windows into the home area,
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- in the same positions which they occupied relative to that door. When
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- Virtual Desktop opens the next time, it will move the windows back to
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- that door area. This capability is important if you don’t intend to keep
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- Virtual Desktop open all the time, because it lets you use doors to
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- separate the windows of several applications, but then to see all of the
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- windows stacked up in the home area when you quit Virtual Desktop. Even
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- if you do keep Virtual Desktop open all the time, this option is necessary
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- for applications which remember the positions of their windows when
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- they quit. If the application’s windows are off-screen when you restart
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- or shut down your Macintosh, it may decide to ignore those positions the
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- next time you open it, instead choosing default positions, probably not
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- what you want. By using this option, and by making it a habit to restart
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- or shut down using Virtual Desktop’s Special menu rather than Finder’s
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- (so that Virtual Desktop gets to quit first), you are assured that such
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- applications will remember meaningful, on-screen window locations for
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- the next session.
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- The default is not to anchor the application’s windows to any door.
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- • Cancel
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- Click here to cancel the changes made to existing application options.
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- • Use Defaults
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- Click here to change all options to their default values, which you may
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- have changed using Make Defaults (see below). Click here with the Option
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- key pressed to change all options to their built-in default values, the ones
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- described in this help file.
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- • Make Defaults
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- Click here to change the default values for all options (except the Color
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- option) to those displayed in the dialog.
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- • OK
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- Click here to accept the options and close the dialog.
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- xThe Door Preferences Dialog
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- When you create a new door, its initial options are the defaults. Its
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- location on the virtual desktop is the current location of the desktop view.
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- You can use the Door Preferences dialog to change the location or other
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- options later on. To change the name of the door, you must select
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- “Rename Door…” from the Actions menu.
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- To change its options, the door must be open, and Virtual Desktop must be
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- active. If the door options cause Virtual Desktop to go into the background
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- after opening the door, you must either press the Option key while opening
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- the door using the menu command or door icon window, or bring Virtual
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- Desktop back to the front after opening the door.
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- • View Offset option
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- These numbers indicate many pixels the door location is away from the
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- home position, horizontally and vertically. (Positive numbers indicate a
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- door location above or to the left of the home position.)
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- If you change these numbers, the virtual desktop will scroll according to
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- the new offsets. This allows you to fine-tune door locations.
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- • Graphical Presence options
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- These options control how the door appears on the desktop, as a door icon
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- window, or as a door file with a Finder icon. Both alternatives give you a
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- way of opening the door quickly from outside Virtual Desktop.
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- ° Show Window option
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- When this option is in effect, a door icon window appears on the desktop.
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- This small window does not move when the virtual desktop scrolls.
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- Clicking once in the window opens the door. You may decide not to have a
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- door icon window for every door you define.
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- This option is on by default.
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- ° Door and Wall color options
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- Click on the top or bottom half of the colored square to change the color
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- used to draw the “door face” or background “wall” in the door icon
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- window. You can use color to distinguish between your various doors. If
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- the door color is dark, Virtual Desktop will draw the door name in white
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- instead of black.
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- The default is a drab brown and gray color scheme.
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- ° Create File… option
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- Click here to create a door file, a small document belonging to Virtual
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- Desktop which gives you a way to open a door through Finder. The file
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- dialog which appears asks you not to make the name of the door file
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- different from the name of the door. This is because the name is the only
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- important information in the door file.
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- You can place door files on the desktop, as an alternative to door icon
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- windows, or in your Startup Items folder, or in a special Doors folder
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- inside your Preferences folder, where they can be attached to document
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- or application aliases by the Maybe utility.
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- See the section entitled “Suggestions for Use” for more information on
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- this approach.
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- • Keyboard Binding option
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- If you don’t have a macro utility which lets you open a door file by
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- pressing a combination of keys, another way to speed up your use of
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- doors is to have keyboard bindings for them. These bindings are valid
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- only when Virtual Desktop is active. You can bind any F-key or
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- Command-digit combination to any door.
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- As with menu commands and door icon windows, if the Option key is
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- pressed when you use the keyboard binding to open a door, Virtual Desktop
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- will ignore the Switch to Application option and remain active.
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- The default is not to have a keyboard binding.
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- • Switch to Application option
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- This pop-up menu lists all applications which Virtual Desktop can switch to
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- as the door is opened. You may want to choose an application whose
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- windows are prevalent in the desktop view when the virtual desktop
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- scrolls to the door location.
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- You have two other choices, “frontmost application” and “stay in Virtual
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- Desktop.” If you select “frontmost application,” Virtual Desktop will
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- return to the background after opening the door, allowing the application
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- which was active before it to return to the front. This makes opening a
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- door similar to clicking on a persistent Virtual Desktop scroll bar while
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- using another application.
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- The default is to stay in Virtual Desktop.
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- • Cancel
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- Click here to cancel the changes made to existing door options.
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- • Use Defaults
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- Click here to change all options to their default values, which you may
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- have changed using Make Defaults (see below). Click here with the Option
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- key pressed to change all options to their built-in default values, the ones
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- described in this help file.
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- • Make Defaults
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- Click here to change the default values for all options (except the View
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- Offset option) to those displayed in the dialog.
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- • OK
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- Click here to accept the options and close the dialog.
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