The Info window is a tool you use to learn about various items on your desktop and in Finder windows. For some items, you can also control specific aspects of how those items work and how they can be used. You can access all the tools in the Info window from a single pane by using its expansion triangles. The window is organized into sections; you expose a section by clicking its expansion triangle. You can have multiple information windows open at the same time (which is helpful when you want to compare items). The Info window has slightly different features and information for each of the following groups: Folders and volumes Applications Documents The sections you see for each type of item are described in Table 4.4. Table 4.4. Sections of the Get Info WindowSection | Applicable Items | Information/Tools It Provides |
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Spotlight Comments | Folders and volumes; applications; documents | Enables you to enter comments that will be searched when you use Spotlight or choose this as a criterion for a smart folder search. | General | Folders and volumes; applications; documents | Provides identification information about the item, such as its name, type, and significant dates. | More Info | Folders and volumes; applications; documents | Provides additional information about an item such as the date on which it was last opened, resolution information (for images), and so on. | Name & Extension | Folders and volumes; applications; documents | Gives the full item name, including its filename extension if applicable. | Preview | Folders and volumes; applications; documents | Shows the icon of everything except documents. For documents, a preview of the document's content is provided (this is the same preview the Column view provides). | Languages | Applications | Displays and enables you to choose the languages that should be available in the application. | Plug-ins | Applications | Enables you to configure plug-ins for the application. You can enable or disable plug-ins and can add or remove them. | Open with | Documents | Enables you to select an application with which to open a document. You can also set the application used for all documents of the same type. | Ownership & | Folders and volumes; | Enables you to configure the access | Permissions | applications; documents | permissions for an item. |
Examples of how to use each of these parts of the Info Window are provided in the following sections. Working with the Spotlight Comments Information The Spotlight Comments section enables you to add comments to the selected item: 1. | Open the Info window for the item in which you are interested. | 2. | Expand the Spotlight Comments section. | 3. | Enter your comments in the field. The comments you enter remain with the item, and you can read them by either expanding the Comments section or adding the Comments column to the List view and viewing a Finder window in that view. | TIP You can use the Comments field as a search criterion for a smart folder. This can be useful to create and easily gather a group of related items together in a smart folder. Working with General Information The General section of the Info window is used mostly to provide detailed information about an item. However, for specific items, you can also use the controls it provides: 1. | Select the item you are interested in and choose File, Get Info or press -I. The Info window will appear. TIP You can also use the Actions pop-up menu or contextual menu to open the Info window. | 2. | Expand the General section if it isn't expanded by default. | 3. | View the information provided at the top of the window. | 4. | Use any tools that appear to configure the item. | Depending on the item you select, you have the following choices: You can select the Locked check box that appears when the selected item is a document, a folder, or an application to prevent the item from being changed. You can use the Stationery Pad check box to convert a selected document into a template. If the selected item is an alias, you can associate it with a different file by using the Select New Original button and then choosing the file you want it to point to. You can apply a color label by clicking the color you want to apply to the item. Click the "x" button to remove a label from the item. Working with More Info Information The More Info section provides a variety of data that depends on the kind of item about which you are viewing information. For example, when you have selected an image file, this section displays resolution information. For most items, you will see the date on which the item was last opened. In some cases, Mac OS X can't generate any more information for an item in which case you'll see No Info in this section. To view more info for an item, do the following: 1. | Select the item and press -I. The Info window will open. | 2. | Expand the More Info section. | Working with Name and Extension Information The Name & Extension section enables you to view and change the name of the selected item: 1. | Select the item you are interested in and press -I. The Info window will appear. | 2. | Expand the Name & Extension section. | 3. | Edit the item name in the Name & Extension field that appears. Remember to add or edit filename extensions as appropriate (volumes and folders don't have filename extensions). | NOTE Applications have the filename extension .app. When you are displaying Name & Extension information for a document, the "Hide extension" check box will be enabled. When this is checked, the filename extension for the file is hidden in Finder windows. This check box is overridden by the Finder's file extension preference. If the "Show all file extensions" check box in the Finder Preferences window is checked, filename extensions are shown regardless of the "Hide extension" check box for an individual file. The Finder preference must be unchecked for this box to hide or show a file's filename extension. Working with Preview Information The Preview section provides a preview of the selected item. For everything except documents, this preview is simply the item's icon. However, when you use this feature on a document, you get a preview of the item's content, just as you do when you view a Finder window in Column view. If the content is dynamic, such as a QuickTime movie, you can view or hear that content from the Preview section: 1. | Select the item you are interested in and press -I to open the Info window. | 2. | Expand the Preview section. | 3. | Use the Preview section to preview the item's content. For example, use the controls to view the item if it is a QuickTime movie. If you selected an image, you can view a preview of the image. | For documents for which Mac OS X can't generate a preview, you see the appropriate icon instead. Working with Languages Information Mac OS X applications can support various languages. The Languages section of the Information window enables you to choose the languages you want to be available in an application. Do the following steps: 1. | Select the application you are interested in and press -I. | 2. | Expand the Languages section. | 3. | Remove the check box next to any language you want to disable for that application. | 4. | Check the check box next to any language you want to enable in the application. | 5. | To remove a language from the application, select the language and click Remove. After you confirm what you are doing, that language's support files are removed from the application's files and are no longer available. | 6. | To add language support to the application, click the Add button and select the language file you want to add. | TIP You can have more than one section of the Info window expanded at the same time. In fact, you can have as few as none expanded, or you can have all of them expanded. Working with Plug-In Information Mac OS X applications can use plug-ins to provide additional capabilities and functionality. You can enable or disable plug-ins for an application and remove or add plug-ins using the following steps: 1. | Select the application for which you want to configure plug-ins and press -I. | 2. | Expand the Plug-ins section. | 3. | Uncheck the box next to any plug-in you want to disable for that application. | 4. | Check the box next to any plug-in you want to enable in the application. | 5. | To remove a plug-in from the application, select the plug-in and click Remove. After you confirm what you are doing, that plug-in is removed from the application and is no longer available. | 6. | To add a plug-in to the application, click the Add button and select the plug-in file you want to add. | Working with Open with Information You can use the "Open with" section to determine which application is used to open a file: 1. | Select the document you are interested in and press -I. | 2. | Expand the "Open with" section. | 3. | Select the application with which you want the file to be opened on the pop-up menu; the application currently associated with the document is shown in the pop-up menu. The "suggested" applications appear on the menu by default. If you want to select an application that is not shown on the pop-up menu, click Other and select the application you want to be used. | 4. | If you want all files of the same type to be opened with the application you selected, click the Change All button. | Working with Ownership and Permissions Information The Ownership & Permissions section is used to configure access to the item (see Figure 4.22). This area enables you to control who has access to an item, as well as defining the type of access provided. Figure 4.22. The Ownership & Permissions section of the Information window is an important security tool whether you share your Mac directly or across a network.
To learn how to configure access to an item, p. 959. Working with the Inspector | When you work with the Info window, each item has its own window. This is nice because you can display the Info window for multiple items at the same time. However, it can get tedious when you don't want to do this because you have to select each item, open its Info window, and then close the Info window when you are done. |
You can use the Inspector to see information about the currently selected item rather than the one that was selected when you opened the Info window. This is handy because you can leave the Inspector open and as you select items, their information will be displayed. You don't clutter up your desktop with lots of Info windows and you don't have to keep opening the Info window for items. To open the Inspector, hold the Option key down and choose File, Show Inspector or press -I. The Inspector window will appear. It looks just like the Info window except it has square corners instead of rounded ones. As you select items on the desktop, the information in the Inspector will change to reflect the currently selected item. |