How to Do Everything with Mac OS X Panther

You won’t want to just leave every window where it is when it opens; your screen would get very cluttered. You can move windows around, minimize them, close them, and zoom them, all with simple operations using the mouse. Each Mac OS X window has three control buttons in the top-left corner. Clicking these buttons closes, minimizes, or zooms the window. When you move your cursor over these buttons, they display an X, an –, and a +, to give you visual clues as to their function.

The three buttons, colored red, yellow, and green, do the following:

You’ll also want to move windows around your screen to see other things. Just click your cursor anywhere on the metal part of a Finder window and move it where you want. (Well, almost anywhere—you can’t move a window by clicking the sidebar separator or by clicking the button names in the toolbar, but anywhere else works fine.)

For other windows, those of applications that don’t have a brushed metal interface, click anywhere in the title bar and drag the window to move it. Aside from the colors, these windows work the same as the Finder windows you saw previously.

You’ll also want to resize your windows from time to time. While the Zoom button can help you do this quickly, you don’t get to choose the final size of the window. If you want to make a window larger or smaller, just click and drag the resize box at the bottom-right corner of any window.

You can resize windows to make them as small or as large as you want. Moving and resizing windows in this manner is the same for the Finder and most other applications, though some applications use static windows that you cannot resize.

Shortcut

Like many operations in Mac OS X, there are keyboard shortcuts to close and minimize windows. To close a window, just press z-W; to minimize a window, press z-M.

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