

Should I really mention Flux? Because everyone should already have one installed.įlux turns your monitor colors to be warm at night. Highlights, pretty-prints, and transforms json.They do amazing things to your Quick Preview, like: That's a whole set of different Quick Preview plugins in this wonderful repo. Do you want your terminals sorted? Two key presses. Do you want to have an IDE opened next to your browser? Two key presses.
#HYPERSWITCH MACOS WINDOWS#
It is a life-saver for people who have a lot of opened windows and complex workflows. Spectacle allows using keyboard shortcuts to reorganize windows on your desktop. It adds new icons to your Finder to open anything inside your Terminal or Editor with a single click: You can drag-and-drop it to the terminal (which many users do not like) or you can use OpenInTerminal-Lite.

#HYPERSWITCH MACOS MAC OS X#
When traveling around your files in Finder you might need to open the current folder inside your Terminal. Unlike the software developed for Windows system, most of the applications installed in Mac OS X generally can be removed with relative ease.

It works great for both light and dark background. It sounds not like much, but the feel from this app is amazing. The next app allows highlighting the currently focused window. Much improved over the built in app switcher glares at Apple Alfred (macOS) Puts powerful macros and workflows at your fingertips Alfred Scratchpad Workflow (macOS) My favorite Alfred workflow. Pops up on whichever monitor your cursor is currently in. One solution I can think of is to disable the option mapping for tab specifically: Then I could hit command-tab, which iTerm2 would interpret as option-tab, but not send along as ESC-tab, and instead ignore so that HyperSwitch could pick it up.You might also want to hide the original clock from your status bar. HyperSwitch (macOS) Configurable app switcher that is multiple monitor friendly. I'm guessing that the Mac OS switcher is able to intercept the command-tab sequence before iTerm2 sees it and does the command / option swap, even when Secure Keyboard Entry is on but that HyperSwitch can't do that, because the Mac OS switcher is more special? Dunno. But it doesn't seem to let HyperSwitch capture it and turning Secure Keyboard Entry off doesn't work for my case because of the command / option swap. letting the Mac OS switcher capture the command-tab. This seems very similar to #7814 (closed), except that Secure Keyboard Entry seems to me like it's closer to doing the right thing, i.e. So it looks like the command / option swap is taking precedence over Mac OS picking off the command-tab combination, which is presumably as expected.Ĭommand-tab should activate HyperSwitch, even when command and option are swapped. If I quit from HyperSwitch, and turn off Secure Keyboard Entry, I get the same effect: command-tab sends ESC TAB, option-tab activates the regular Mac Switcher.

If I quit from HyperSwitch, command-tab activates the regular Mac OS switcher, as expected. When any other app is active, command-tab activates the HyperSwitch switcher, as expected. (Also, if I hit option-tab, it does "Profile CPU Usage", as you'd expect, since option is mapped to command.) The regular Mac switcher activates, rather than the HyperSwitch switcher.
