Dock = Taskbar
At the bottom of almost every Mac OS X screen sits a tiny row of photorealistic icons. This is the Dock, a close parallel to the Windows taskbar. (As in Windows, it may be hidden or placed on the left or the right edge of the screen instead—options that appeal primarily to power users and eccentrics.)
The Dock displays the icons of all your open windows and programs, which are denoted by small, glowing dots beneath their icons. Clicking these icons opens the corresponding files, folders, disks, documents, and programs. If you click and hold (or right-click) an open program’s icon, you’ll see a pop-up list of the open windows in that program, along with Quit and a few other commands.
When you close a program, its icon disappears from the Dock (unless you’ve secured it there for easy access, as described in Figure 2-18).
Tip
You can cycle through the various open programs on your Mac by
holding down the
key and pressing Tab repeatedly. (Sound
familiar? It’s just like Alt-Tabbing in Windows.) And if you just
tap
-Tab, you bounce back and forth between the
two programs you’ve used most recently.
What you may find confusing at first, though, is that the Dock also performs one function of the Windows Start menu: It provides a “short list” of programs and files that you use often, ...
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