![]() ![]() With TotalFinder you also get this build-in. Path Finder has an option to copy the path of the selected files to the clipboard. If you feel like organizing your macros have a look at this post. In addition, here’s another suggestion: create a group that is only active in Finder and Path Finder and put the macros in there. You have to setup a shortcut which makes sense to you. Some macros have no shortcut assigned to them. If you install all downloaded files the following groups (prepended with a hash mark) will be generated at the top of your library: Most of the macros work with a “If Then Else” action: If the application at the front is Finder then do X, otherwise select menu entry Y in Path Finder.Īll the macros are available as a download. ![]() Here’s my setup for switching Finders and bringing some of the power of Path Finder to Finder (vanilla version). Nowadays I use both of them with a little help of Keyboard Maestro. The thing was, I’ve become quite accustomed to having Path Finder around for bigger tasks. I had tried using only Path Finder, but for small tasks it was like cracking a nut with a sledgehammer. Like any good software aficionado I tried many alternatives and extensions and for now I’ve settled with this setup: But even today, after almost 8 years and many small refinements by Apple, I think the Finder could be much more than what it is today. It hasn’t seen any major updates since I’ve become a Mac user which was shortly after Mac OS X v10.4 Tiger was released in April 2005.Īfter making the switch it took me about one year until I felt at home. There’s one application on all the Mac’s out there that everyone uses: the file browser - on Mac OS X better known as the Finder. ![]()
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