Chapter 4. What's Up, Dock?
In This Chapter
Getting to know the Dock
Discovering the default Dock icons
Talkin' Trash
Delving into Dock customization
Adjusting Dock preferences
Take a minute to look at the row of icons at the bottom of your display. That row, good friend, is the Dock (shown in Figure 4-1), and those individual pictures are known as icons (which I discuss in greater detail momentarily).
Figure 4-1. The Dock and all its default icons.
Tip
Dock icons are odd ducks — you activate one with a single click. Most other icons are selected (highlighted) when you single-click and are opened when you double-click. So Dock icons are kind of like links on a Web page — you need only a single click to open them.
A Quick Introduction to Using the Dock
Single-click a Dock icon to open the item it represents:
If the item is an application, the application opens and becomes active. If the application is already open, it becomes active, which brings it and all its windows to the front.
If the item is a document, that document opens in its appropriate application, which becomes the active application. If that application is already open, it becomes the active application with this document in the front.
If the item is a folder icon, a menu with its contents appears and the Finder becomes the active application. If you select Show in Finder from this menu the folder's window opens in the Finder.
Note ...
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