• HeartyBeast@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    Or command+click because up until osx, or even way later than that macOS didnt even had rightclick.

    The Mac introduced right click with System 8 in 1997. The keyboard equivalent is ctrl-click, by the way - not command click.

    Why does the finder half asses this interaction (and moving a folder up) while moving the cursor and selecting/unselecting items is done like on other plattforms?

    Not sure what you mean. Holding shift while using the keyboard (or mouse) will let you select multiple contiguous items. Hold cmd to select items dotted about.

    https://support.apple.com/en-gb/HT201236 May be a helpful read

    And this doesn’t strike you as being unintuitive?

    Not really, CMD-O for open, together with CMD-C for copy, CMD-V for paste etc were introduced in 1982 with the Apple Lisa.

    As I say, Finder is primarily designed to be mouse driven, so most people will be using double-click to open, otherwise CMD-O is your friend.

    The good news There is a tiny bit of freeware available called “PresButan” that will let you modify the Finder behaviour match your preferences. You can grab it here: http://briankendall.net/presButan/index.htm

    Enjoy!

    • macniel@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      No I am saying that the Finder nearly got everything right in regards to keyboard interacting EXCEPT going up a Folder, entering a folder or executing a folder.

      cmd-o is ONLY required on the macOS while other OSses and Systems just require a simple Enter-keystroke. That’s my issue! Needing a Daemon to fix this issue is quite odd to me.

      • HeartyBeast@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I think the problem is that you are keyboard-centric and the Finder, since its introduction is mouse-centric. Therefore the assumption is that if you have selected a file, whatever you’re going to do to it - ‘Open’ isn’t likely. Afterall, if you were going to open it, you would have double clicked on it, or dragged it on top of an application icon.

        You can argue that that’s “bad” if you want - and OK. But the daemon will fix if for you.

        Similarly, the mechanisms for going up a folder (and there are many) are mouse-centric.