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Xtrafinder for el capitan
Xtrafinder for el capitan







The brief time I spent with El Capitan didn't impress me. Very happy with Mavericks as I use FinderPop daily and have since the days of OS8. EC is now "gone like a wild goose in Winter". I installed EC on my late-2012 iMac for a bit and when I invoked FinderPop, the system froze to the point of a hard restart.

Xtrafinder for el capitan software#

This is why I'm not a big fan of beta software I'm sticking to Mavericks on my machine at the moment. Turly wrote:And there are rumours that the "SIP Disable" feature will be removed when 10.11 is released later this month. But again, the need to disable SIP is a big no-no for all but the most die-hard of users.ĭoes SIP need to be disabled and remain disabled for FP to work? Apparently some applications like cDock or Bartender need to have SIP disabled at initial installation, but will continue to work when SIP is again enabled after installation. I will hopefully have a bit of time this weekend to work on this, fingers crossed I can get it working. Or rather, it "works" too well - the Finder's contextual menu items do not show up in the menu. On El Capitan, FP does NOT work when you control-click something in the Finder. Mind you, I was still running OS 9 + FinderPop on my iMac in 2005! You can log out of the current account and see if there is an old account to log into.Alas disabling SIP is a step too far for most people.Īnd there are rumours that the "SIP Disable" feature will be removed when 10.11 is released later this month.

xtrafinder for el capitan

There isn't anything there as it is a new account. The system logs you into that new user account and you think it is your old account. I have seen where some people accidentally create a new user during the Setup Assistant. To open it, hold down the Option key in Finder and choose Library from the Go menu. I think El Capitan resets the Sidebar to defaults, so any folders you had there may not appear.įinally, if you are looking for MOD, I assume it is something that would be in the user Library. Then there's just using the wrong term to describe something like the Sidebar in a Finder window. The Desktop is the background you see behind all windows, there are multiple Desktops in Mission Control, depending on your setup, and there is Desktop Folder in your Home directory. What do you mean by "my desktop." That can mean several things to different people. When I go to my desktop there are no folders. (Command-Shift-dot) and that's what I did. I'm not sure, but I think the author's advice was to use ⌘⇧.

xtrafinder for el capitan xtrafinder for el capitan

It will look as the figure below:įinally, in System Preferences > Keyboard > Shortcuts > Services set the shortcut you wish. Make the selections you see in the rectangle below from the pop-up menus in the upper part of the window and save (the original workflow name was ToggleHiddenFiles and it will be saved to your ~/Library/Services folder). Osascript -e 'tell application "Finder" to activate' SHOWHIDDEN=`defaults read AppleShowAllFiles`ĭefaults write AppleShowAllFiles -bool FALSEĭefaults write AppleShowAllFiles -bool TRUE Osascript -e 'tell application "Finder" to quit' You have to launch Automator and choose Service, then select Utilities > Run shell script.

xtrafinder for el capitan

I forgot about it as I used XtraFinder before upgrading to El Capitan, but now I gave it a new try and it works flawlessly on 10.11.1. Not exactly what you asked for, but several years ago googling around I found an Automator workflow to show/hide invisible files (unfortunately I don't remember where and can't give credits to the author).







Xtrafinder for el capitan