As I’ll explain below, Stage Manager already sends things to the strip more often than I’d like and doesn’t provide enough ways to add apps to the current stage. I quickly turned on ‘All at Once’ and never looked back because I found the alternative distracting and confusing. In contrast, opening a new Safari window with the ‘All at Once’ option enabled just opens the new window onto the same stage as the existing window without sending anything to the strip. So, if I have Notes and a Safari window open, opening a new Safari window moves both Notes and the first Safari window to the recent apps strip leaving only the new Safari window open on the stage. Replayįor an app like Safari, the ‘One at a Time’ setting opens new windows on the stage, moving any window of that app that is already open and any others to the strip. Opening a Mail message with ‘One at a Time’ enabled. You can turn the feature off in the Desktop & Dock section of System Settings, but I don’t know why you would, given how easy it is to access them by clicking on the desktop or using the Finder. To make them reappear, all you need to do is click on the desktop, which whisks your apps away to the stage and reveals your desktop along with any documents you’ve saved there. Stage Manager goes a step further by completely hiding the documents on your desktop by default when an app or set of apps is onscreen. If the same app is paired as a set with any other app in the strip, only the top app can be dragged onto the stage.Īpple took the first step to automate desktop cleanup with Stacks in Mojave, grouping documents by type into neat stacks that can be expanded with a single click. Even if you click on an app’s icon in a mixed set, you can only drag the top app in the pile onto the stage. You would think you’d be able to drag any app out of a mixed set of apps and onto the stage, but you can’t. Because Pixelmator Pro is behind Finder in the last strip workspace, it can’t be dragged onto the current stage.
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