Switching to the Mac[c] The Missing Manual

3.3. The Sidebar

As in Windows XP, the Sidebar is a pane at the left side of every navigation window. Unlike Windows, however, the Mac OS X Sidebar doesn't list operations you can perform on the current folder. (For that, you use the Finder's shortcut menu, which you summon by Control-clicking a folder.)

Instead, the Mac OS X Sidebar lists places where you might look for files and foldersthat is, disks, folders, and network servers. Above the horizontal divider, you get the icons for your hard drives, iPods, flash drives , and other removable goodies .

Below the divider, you can stick the icons of anything else: files, programs, folders, or whatever.

Each icon is a shortcut. For example, click the Applications icon to view the contents of your Applications folder in the main part of the window (Figure 3-6). And if you click the icon of a file or program, it opens.

Figure 3-6. The Sidebar makes navigation very quick, because you can jump back and forth between distant corners of your Mac with a single click.

In column view the Sidebar is especially handy, since it eliminates all of the columns to the left of the one you want, all the way back to your harddrive level. You've just folded up your desktop!

Good things to put here: favorite programs, disks on the network to which you often connect, a document you're working on every day, and so on. Folder and disk icons here work just like the normal versions of those icons. You can drag a document onto a folder icon to file it there, drag a JPEG image file onto the Photoshop icon there, and so on.

In fact, the disks and folders here are spring-loaded (Section 2.8.2).

3.3.1. Fine-tuning the Sidebar

The beauty of this parking lot for containers is that it's so easy to set up with your favorite places. For example:

Then again, you probably wouldn't want to hide the Sidebar. It's one of the handiest navigation aids since the invention of the steering wheel. For example:

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