![]() ![]() It's possible to minimize the active window in above shortcut key but actually it's hidden the active window(application). To Minimize the active window(application):Ĭommand+H :Hide active window(application) I recommend you to use below shortcut key instead of using default minimizing shortcut key. You will find new menu item in the menu bar also.Restart Window(Application) which you would like to affect by the shortcut key.(No reboot requred).Press "Command+Shift+M" in "Shortcut Key" textbox. Choose "All Application" which means this change will affect all application, put the text "Maximize" in "Menu Title" textbox and.Go to System Preferences>Keyboard>Shortcuts>App Shortcut, then click.To maximize the active window(application), you must assign the operation to shortcut key as follows (Setup is required) :Maximize the active window.Command-Option-M :Minimize all windows of the active application to the Dock.Command-M :Minimize the active window to the Dock.Sorry I made a mistake about minimizing window. Other applications like Slate and Moom always use the accessiblity API. Telling the application to change the bounds of a window is faster but it doesn't work with all applications. ![]() When you tell System Events to change the position and size through the accessibility API, there is a noticeable delay between when the position and the size are changed. Set bounds of window 1 to Ĭlick (button 1 of window 1 where subrole is "AXZoomButton") Tell application (path to frontmost application as text) Tell application "Finder" to set b to bounds of window of desktop I have used FastScripts to assign a shortcut to this script: try Or add a line like this to ~/.slate with Slate: bind m:cmd shift move screenOriginX screenOriginY screenSizeX screenSizeY If you want the shortcut to always maximize a window to fill a screen, you can use for example Spectacle: This is the behavior up until macOS 10.16 Catalina, so this is what you are experiencing.Assign a shortcut for the Zoom menu item (or whatever it's called in your locale) from System Preferences: You could double click the window title.You could press Option ⌥⃣ while clicking on the green stoplight.The previous "best fitting size" behavior was moved to two places: OS X 10.10 Yosemite replaced the default behavior of the green stoplight with "full screen". MacOS X 10.7 Lion added a zoom widget at the right side of the window that would switch the window into full screen mode and back. MacOS X changed the location and the appearance of the window widgets, but the green stoplight had the same behavior up until OS X 10.9 Mountain Lion. You can check it out using an online emulation of System 6. In classic MacOS the widget would make the window change to a size that is best fitting the content of the window. The reason for this is that historically, macOS had no concept of windows covering the whole screen: In some cases you can hold Shift ⇧⃣ while clicking the green stoplight button to have a "cover the whole screen, but don't go into full screen mode" behavior, but this depends on the app. If you want this consistently, you will need to install a third party utility, like Rectangle, Magnet, Moom or several others. ![]()
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