Column View

Icon view and list view should certainly be familiar to anyone who’s used a personal computer before. But for most Mac fans, column view is something new—and welcome.

The goal is simple: To create a means of burrowing down through nested folders without leaving a trail of messy, overlapping windows in your wake.

The solution is shown in Figure 1-19. It’s a list view that’s divided into several vertical panes. The first pane shows all the icons of your disks, including your main hard drive. (The Network icon gives you access to other computers on your office network, if you have one.)

When you click a disk (once), the second pane shows a list of all the folders in it. Each time you click a folder in one pane, the pane to its right shows what’s inside. The other panes slide to the left, sometimes out of view. (Use the horizontal scroll bar or the Shift-Tab keystroke to bring them back.) You can keep clicking until you’re actually looking at the file icons inside the most deeply nested folder.

If you discover that your hunt for a particular file has taken you down a blind alley, it’s not a big deal to backtrack, since the trail of folders you’ve followed to get here is still sitting there before you on the screen. As soon as you click a different folder in one of the earlier panes, the panes to its right suddenly change, so that you can burrow down a different rabbit hole.

The beauty of column view is, first of all, that it keeps your screen tidy. It effectively shows you several simultaneous folder levels, but contains them within a single window. With a quick

Column View

-W, you can close the entire window, panes and all. Second, column view provides an excellent sense of where you are. Because your trail is visible at all times, it’s much harder to get lost, wondering what folder you’re in and how you got there, than in any other window view.

Note

Column view is always alphabetical. There’s no way to sort the lists by date, for example, as you can in list view.

If the rightmost folder contains pictures, sounds, or movies, Mac OS X even lets you look at them or play them, right there in the Finder. If it’s a certain kind of text document (AppleWorks or PDF, for example), you actually see a tiny image of the first page. If it’s any other kind of document, you see a blowup of its icon and a few file statistics. You can drag this jumbo icon anywhere—into another folder, for example.

Figure 1-19. If the rightmost folder contains pictures, sounds, or movies, Mac OS X even lets you look at them or play them, right there in the Finder. If it’s a certain kind of text document (AppleWorks or PDF, for example), you actually see a tiny image of the first page. If it’s any other kind of document, you see a blowup of its icon and a few file statistics. You can drag this jumbo icon anywhere—into another folder, for example.

Column View by Keyboard

Efficiency fans can operate this entire process by keyboard alone. For example:

  • You can jump from one pane to the next by pressing the right or left arrow keys. Each press highlights the closest icon in the next or previous pane. (Pressing Tab and Shift-Tab don’t work, as they did in 10.1.)

  • You can use any of the commands in the Go menu, or their keyboard equivalents (see Section 2.10.4), to fill your columns with the contents of the corresponding folder—Home, Favorites, Applications, and so on.

  • The Back command (clicking the Back button on the toolbar, pressing

    Column View by Keyboard

    -[, or choosing GoBack) works as it does in a Web browser: it retraces your steps backward. You can repeat this command until you return to the column setup that first appeared when you switched to column view. Once you’ve gone back, in fact, you can then go forward again (choose GoForward, or press

    Column View by Keyboard

    -]).

  • Within a pane, press the up or down arrow keys to highlight successive icons in the list. Or type the first couple of letters of an icon’s name to jump directly to it.

  • When you finally highlight the icon you’ve been looking for, press

    Column View by Keyboard

    -O or

    Column View by Keyboard

    -down arrow to open it (or double-click it, of course). You can open anything in any column; you don’t have to wait until you’ve reached the rightmost column.

Manipulating the Columns

The number of columns you can see without scrolling depends on the width of the window. In no other view are the zoom and resize controls (Section 1.2) so important.

That’s not to say, however, that you’re limited to four columns (or whatever fits on your monitor). You can make the columns wider or narrower—either individually or all at once—to suit the situation. Figure 1-20 shows the details.

View Options

Just as in icon and list view, you can choose ViewShow View Options to open a dialog box—a Spartan one, in this case—offering additional control over your column views.

Note

Oddly enough, there’s no “This window only” or “All windows” option here. Any changes you make here affect all column views.

  • Text size. Whatever point size you choose here affects the type used for icons in all column views.

  • Show icon. For maximum speed, turn off this option. Now you’ll see only file names, not the tiny icons next to them, in all column views.

  • Show preview column. The far-right Preview column (see Figure 1-19) can be handy when you’re browsing graphics, sounds, or movie files. The rest of the time, it can get in the way, slightly slowing down the works and pushing other, more useful columns off to the left side of the window. If you turn off this checkbox, the Preview column doesn’t appear.

    Note

    No matter what view you’re in, remember this if you ever start dragging an icon and then change your mind: Press the Esc key, even while the mouse button is still down. The icon flies back to its precise starting place. (Too bad real life doesn’t have a similar feature.)

You can make all the columns wider or narrower simultaneously by dragging any of the small handles (circled) at the bottom of the columns. To make a single column wider or narrower, Option-drag the column handle at the bottom of its right edge.

Figure 1-20. You can make all the columns wider or narrower simultaneously by dragging any of the small handles (circled) at the bottom of the columns. To make a single column wider or narrower, Option-drag the column handle at the bottom of its right edge.

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