![]() ![]() You can also access it from the menu bar's "window" menu item.į11 or an outward pinch with four or five fingers on the trackpad clears all windows temporarily so you can access the desktop (pinch inwards or F11 again to get it all back). ![]() ctrl+arrow-down when the app is activated, double tapping the app icon in the dock with two fingers (not clicking, tapping), a downward motion with three fingers on the trackpad (needs to be enabled first in trackpad settings).Īnother option is right clicking/control-clicking the app and selecting the window from the top of its list This can be invoked a few different ways. One way is clicking the minimised view in the Dock (that you don't seem to get in this case)Īnother is to use app exposé. Some also allow cmd+z, reverting the closing. In Safari (and many other browsers) reopening the last closed window, if it's fully closed, not minimised, is cmd+shift+t. ![]() It's for creating a new document or a new Safari page. I've attached a video demonstrating a few.Īlso note that what I said about cmd+n was for a whole new window, not bringing up an old one. Don't know if you've changed a setting, if it's Word or something else, but there are still a number of ways of accessing minimised windows. One solution I can think of is to disable the option mapping for tab specifically: Then I could hit command-tab, which iTerm2 would interpret as option-tab, but not send along as ESC-tab, and instead ignore so that HyperSwitch could pick it up.Looks like you minimise the Word window - Now usually minimising a window makes it fly into the Dock (see my attached video). HYPERSWITCH MACOS MAC OSI'm guessing that the Mac OS switcher is able to intercept the command-tab sequence before iTerm2 sees it and does the command / option swap, even when Secure Keyboard Entry is on but that HyperSwitch can't do that, because the Mac OS switcher is more special? Dunno. But it doesn't seem to let HyperSwitch capture it and turning Secure Keyboard Entry off doesn't work for my case because of the command / option swap. letting the Mac OS switcher capture the command-tab. This seems very similar to #7814 (closed), except that Secure Keyboard Entry seems to me like it's closer to doing the right thing, i.e. So it looks like the command / option swap is taking precedence over Mac OS picking off the command-tab combination, which is presumably as expected.Ĭommand-tab should activate HyperSwitch, even when command and option are swapped. If I quit from HyperSwitch, and turn off Secure Keyboard Entry, I get the same effect: command-tab sends ESC TAB, option-tab activates the regular Mac Switcher. command-tab sends an ESC TAB sequence to the terminal window.If I turn off Secure Keyboard Entry in iTerm2, I get this behavior instead: ![]() Except by hitting ESC and then TAB of course. (And option-tab continues to do "Profile CPU Usage" I don't have a way to send an ESC TAB sequence to the terminal window, as expected. If I quit from HyperSwitch, command-tab activates the regular Mac OS switcher, as expected. When any other app is active, command-tab activates the HyperSwitch switcher, as expected. (Also, if I hit option-tab, it does "Profile CPU Usage", as you'd expect, since option is mapped to command.) The regular Mac switcher activates, rather than the HyperSwitch switcher.
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