Part Of The Dock in Mac OS

Introduction

The Dock

The big bar at the bottom (by default) of your Mac’s screen is called the Dock. When you first get your Mac there will be a number of icons in it. Most of these are icons for applications but there are other kinds as well. The Dock can be a bit confusing at first; this guide will make it more clear.

The Dock is split into two sections separated by a thin, vertical line. Each section has its own use.

The Application Section

The left section contains application icons. You’ll see some such as Finder and Dashboard. You can click on these icons to launch the applications they represent.

If an application is already running you will see a black triangle beneath its icon. In this case clicking the icon will bring the application to the front.

If you open an application that does not already have an icon in the Dock a temporary icon will be placed at the end of the application section as long as the application is running. When you quit the application the icon will disappear.

You can add icons to this section in two ways. The first way is to simply drag an application from the Finder into the application section of the Dock. The second is to open the application and then while it’s running Ctrl+Click the temporary icon and click “Keep in Dock.” This will keep the icon in the Dock even after you quit the application.

To remove an icon just drag it from the Dock to anywhere else on the screen. The icon will disappear in a puff of smoke.

The Document/Window Section

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how to Install Aplication in Mac OS

Installing applications on a Mac is simply wonderful! Mac OS X makes the installation process a piece of cake!

How you should install an application may vary depending on what solution the developer of the application finds most appropriate. We’ll guide you through them all.

Disc image+Application

It is very common that applications are put in a so called “disc image”. Sometimes you need to click a file (state 1) in order to extract the disc image, but the disc image often does this by itself (goesdirectly to state 2, that means).

The two states of a disc image

You just click it (the state 2 icon) and inside you will find your application.

Expecting trouble? Don’t! All you have to do now is drag the downloaded application into your Applications folder and it will be copied (installed). Note that you don’t have to put it in the applications folder, but its is probably the most convenient place to put your applications.

Drag the application to the Applications folder

When the copying process is done, you can throw the disc image file away (there may be two files – see above) by dragging it to the trash. Note that Mac OS X calls it “ejecting a disc image” and not “throwing a disc image away”. You will notice that the trash bin looks different when you drag the file, but don’t worry, just drop the file and it will disappear.

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