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Helpful answers
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Sep 13, 2016 6:39 PM in response to leee24by Grant Bennet-Alder,This article may contain the key to that behavior:
Command+Tab launches the Application Switcher, that’s the first step. Then, continue holding down the Command key and then try the following buttons to modify the behavior of the app switcher of OS X:
- Release the Command+Tab keys when the highlight is on a selected app to switch to that highlighted app
- tab – move selection to the right in the app list
- ` – move selection to the left
- h – hide the selected application
- q – quit the selected application
- mouse scrollwheel – move the selection back and forth
- left arrow – move selection to the left
- right arrow – move selection to the right
- up arrow – enter expose (Mission Control) within the selected application
- down arrow – enter expose (Mission Control) within the selected application
- Handoff – for Macs with OS X Yosemite, you can also find available Handoff sessions in the Command+Tab app switcher, these appear on the far left and can be navigated to with the above tricks
from:
http://osxdaily.com/2009/11/17/secrets-of-the-command-tab-mac-application-switch er/
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Sep 13, 2016 9:21 PM in response to Grant Bennet-Alderby leee24,Hmmm, the above post tells me what to do, I already know that, the things is that it doesn't work in a manner that helps, so say I going from Mail to a Safari, Im in Mail, I Command Tab to make Safari the highlighted application, then i release the keys. At the top of my screen I see the Safari menus, but the Mail application still occupies all/ most (not running ads in full screen) of the screen, to get the Safari window on the screen I need to go to the Safari menu, "Window" --> "my widow" and then select the window I want, at this point in time I see the Safari window on my screen and the mail one in background.
It seems to me that Application Switcher doesn't work when app are in full screen mode, which is a bummer and now its doesn't actually Switch Applications to the foreground at all, switching applications is a 4 step process, followed by a bunch of post replies, blah blah blah all with the same inefficient non intuitive results, i.e. the 4 clicks needed to achieve the outcome! Not really a shortcut
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Sep 14, 2016 6:42 AM in response to leee24by Grant Bennet-Alder,It seems to me that Application Switcher doesn't work when app are in full screen mode,
In my opinion, NOTHING works in Full screen mode. Full screen mode is an abomination reverse-ported from iOS, the land of tiny screens and one-at-a-time processing. It has no place on Macs, especially those with Multiple screens, where invoking full screen mode makes the second and subsequent screens go dark.