

When you need to Undo, select “Edit” in the menu bar, then choose “Undo” in the menu that pops up. If you move a file or directory to a new directory, it. One of the easiest ways to perform an Undo action is by using an option in the menu bar at the top of your Mac’s screen. The mv command moves files and directories from one directory to another, or renames a file or directory.
#MAC MOVE COMMAND HOW TO#
RELATED: Macintosh System 1: What Was Apple's Mac OS 1.0 Like? How to Undo and Redo Using the “Edit” Menu Today, Undo and Redo are basically a universal part of computer interfaces on every major computer platform. Apple borrowed many interface elements from Alto software when designing the Apple Lisa (1983), and many of those traditions carried forward to the Macintosh one year later. In the Mac lineage, Undo originated software for the the Xerox Alto computer created in the 1970s-specifically, in a word processor called Bravo.

Redo is almost an undo for Undo, if that makes sense.
#MAC MOVE COMMAND FOR MAC#
I think the few changes above would really help Rhino for Mac approach Rhino for Windows’ pace for users like myself.Similarly, Redo allows you to repeat the last action you performed before the Undo, allowing you to change your mind and repeat your last change. As a 10+ year Rhino user, moving to Mac and having to adjust to a far less sensible and much less swift UI has been a real challenge, and not something I think I can overcome. The default shortcut for moving to 'Next Display' is and you can configure it to whatever you expect. OptionCommandPower button or OptionCommandMedia Eject : Put your Mac to sleep. Press and hold for 1.5 seconds to put your Mac to sleep.
#MAC MOVE COMMAND INSTALL#
These UI changes are pretty critical to me, and are what makes Rhino for Windows such a brilliant product. Open the Command Palette (Cmd+Shift+P) and type shell command to find the Shell Command: Install code command in PATH command. Power button : Press to turn on your Mac or wake it from sleep. Any pop-up dialog items MUST be keyboard-navigable. While working in text, use the command key with one of the arrow keys to move the cursor to different parts of a document. This is just totally nuts and completely unacceptable in a rapid workflow. Instead, you have to actually click ‘Ok’. The real deal-breaker here, is that the ‘Ok’ checkbox within the Hatch pop-up can’t be keyboard-approved - you can’t hit enter or spacebar.


I don’t see why this can’t change and at the very least, the command line mirror the Model browser layout.Īdditionally, commands like ‘Hatch’ always result in pop-ups (regardless of Browser, and admittedly similar to Rhino for Windows). The command line is absent from the Layout Browser, which means all commands pop-up and interrupt quick workflows. Rhino for Mac is borderline unusable for me because of the UI. Picking up on this thread, it is a shame the command line can’t be moved to a more convenient location than the left sidebar.
