2.3. SelectingIcons
To highlight a single icon in preparation for printing, opening, duplicating, or deleting, click the
icon once. (In a list or column view, as described in Chapter 1, you can also click on any visible
piece of information about that file—its size, kind, date modified, and so on.) Both the icon and
the name darken in a uniquely Leopardish way.
Tip: You can change the color of the oval highlighting that appears around the name of a
selected icon. Choose System Preferences, click Appearance, and use the Highlight
Color pop-up menu.)
Figure 2-3. You can highlight several icons simultaneously by dragging a box around them. To do so, drag
from outside of the target icons diagonally across them (right), creating a translucent gray rectangle as you
go. Any icons or icon names touched by this rectangle are selected when you release the mouse. If you press
the Shift or key as you do this, any previously highlighted icons remain selected.
That much may seem obvious. But most first-time Mac users have no idea how to manipulate
more than one icon at a time—an essential survival skill in a graphic interface like the Mac's.
2.3.1. Selecting by Clicking
To highlight multiple files in preparation for moving or copying, use one of these techniques:
• To highlight all the icons. To select all the icons in a window, press -A (the
equivalent of the Edit Select All command).
• To highlight several icons by dragging. You can drag diagonally to highlight a group of
nearby icons, as shown in Figure 2-3. In a list view, in fact, you don't even have to drag
over the icons themselves—your cursor can touch any part of any file's row, like its
modification date or file size.
Tip: If you include a particular icon in your diagonally dragged group by mistake, -
click it to remove it from the selected cluster.
• To highlight consecutive icons in a list. If you're looking at the contents of a window in
list view or column view, you can drag vertically over the file and folder names to
highlight a group of consecutive icons, as described above. (Begin the drag in a blank
spot.)
There's a faster way to do the same thing: Click the first icon you want to highlight, and
then Shift-click the last file. All the files in between are automatically selected, along
with the two icons you clicked. Figure 2-4 illustrates the idea.
Figure 2-4. Left: To select a block of files in list view, click the first icon. Then, while pressing Shift,
click the last one. Mac OS X highlights all the files in between your clicks. This technique mirrors the
way Shift-clicking works in a word processor and in many other kinds of programs.
Right: To remove one of the icons from your selection, -click it.
• To highlight random icons. If you want to highlight only the first, third, and seventh icons
in a window, for example, start by clicking icon No. 1. Then -click each of the
others (or -drag new rectangles around them). Each icon darkens to show that you've
selected it.
If you're highlighting a long string of icons and click one by mistake, you don't have to
start over. Instead, just -click it again, so that the dark highlighting disappears. (If
you do want to start over, you can deselect all selected icons by clicking any empty part
of the window—or by pressing the Esc key.)
The key trick is especially handy if you want to select almost all the icons in a
window. Press -A to select everything in the folder, then -click any unwanted
icons to deselect them.
GEM IN THE ROUGH
Shortcut Menus, Action Menus
It's part of the Mac's user-friendly heritage: You can do practically everything using
only the mouse. Everything is out front, unhidden, and clickable, whether it's an icon,
button, or menu.
But as in rival operating systems, you can shave seconds and steps off of your
workload if you master shortcut menus: short menus that appear right on things you
click and offer commands that the software thinks you might want to invoke at the
moment, as shown here at top.
(They used to be called contextual menus, but Apple started calling them "shortcut
menus" a few years ago, perhaps because that's what they're called in Windows and
Unix.)
To summon a shortcut menu, you click something—an icon, the desktop, inside a
window, a link in Safari, text in a word processor—while pressing the Control key. If
you have a two-button mouse like Apple's standard Mighty Mouse right-clicking can
do the same thing (Section P3.3.2).
A menu drops down listing relevant commands: Get Info, Move to Trash, Copy, and so
on. You can either click the command you want, or type the first couple letters of it
and then tap the Space bar.
These menus become more useful the more you get to know them. The trouble is,
millions of Mac fans never even knew they existed.
That's why, starting in Mac OS X 10.3, Apple introduced a second way to access them.
At the top of every Finder window, you'll find a pop-up menu that's technically
called the Action menu (shown here at bottom).
It lists the same sorts of commands you'd find in the shortcut menus, but offers two
advantages. First, it's visible, so novices stand a better chance of stumbling onto it.
Second, you don't need two hands to open it (one on the Control key, one on the
mouse)—a distinct perk for anyone whose non-dominant hand is already occupied
with a refreshing beverage.
Tip: In icon views, you can either Shift-click or -click to select multiple individual icons.
But you may as well just learn to use the key when selecting individual icons. That way,
you won't have to use a different key in each view.
Once you've highlighted multiple icons, you can manipulate them all at once. For example, you
can drag them en masse to another folder or disk by dragging any one of the highlighted icons.
All other highlighted icons go along for the ride. This technique is especially useful when you
want to back up a bunch of files by dragging them onto a different disk, delete them all by
dragging them to the Trash, and so on.
When multiple icons are selected, the commands in the File and Edit menus—such as Duplicate,
Open, and Make Alias—apply to all of them simultaneously.
Tip: Don't forget that you can instantly highlight all the files in a window (or on the desktop) by
choosing Edit Select All ( -A)—no icon-clicking required.
2.3.2. SelectingIcons from the Keyboard
For the speed fanatic, using the mouse to click an icon is a hopeless waste of time. Fortunately,
you can also select an icon by typing the first couple letters of its name.
When looking at your Home window, for example, you can type M to highlight the Movies
folder. And if you actually intended to highlight the Music folder instead, press the Tab key to
highlight the next icon in the window alphabetically. Shift-Tab highlights the previous icon
alphabetically. Or use the arrow keys to highlight a neighboring icon.
(The Tab-key trick works only in icon, list, and Cover Flow views—not column view, alas. You
can always use the and keys to highlight adjacent columns, however.)
After highlighting an icon this way, you can manipulate it using the commands in the File menu
or their keyboard equivalents: open ( -O), put it into the Trash ( -Delete), Get Info (
-I), duplicate ( -D), or make an alias, as described later in this chapter ( -L). By turning
on the special disability features described on Section 9.1, you can even move the highlighted
icon using only the keyboard.
If you're a first-time Mac user, you may find it excessively nerdy to memorize key-strokes for
functions the mouse performs perfectly well. If you make your living using the Mac, however,
memorizing these keystrokes will reward you immeasurably with speed and efficiency.
. one of the icons from your selection, -click it.
• To highlight random icons. If you want to highlight only the first, third, and seventh icons
in a. -click to select multiple individual icons.
But you may as well just learn to use the key when selecting individual icons. That way,
you won't have