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olusola salau
Apple OS X
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The Dock in OS X serves as a launcher for
commonly-accessed programs, as well as
folders and documents that you drag there,
and as an indicator of running programs. In
addition, it holds the trash and the smiling
Finder icon since this program as the default
file browser is not usually quit.
Since the Dock is regularly accessed, it is
always present in some form on the edge of
the screen; however, while Apple by default
places it at the bottom of your display, there
are several options available to you for its
position.
The first options are those Apple gives you
by default, which are available in the Dock's
system preferences pane, and are to position
at the left, right, or bottom of your display.
However, while these are present in System
Preferences, there are two alternative ways of
accessing these settings.
The first alternative is to right-click the
separator bar on the Dock (between the
applications and the documents and folders
areas), and choose the position from the
contextual menu that appears. The second is
to simply shift-drag the Dock to the desired
location on screen. To do this, simply hold
the Shift key, and then click and drag the
Dock by its separator bar to the right, left, or
bottom of the display.
Beyond the adjustments that Apple allows
through its settings interfaces, the Dock does
support other features which may help you
further customize the Dock's position, and
place it not only at the bottom or to either side of your display, but also to the respective corners of any side.
These options can be set by using the "defaults" Terminal command, in the following manner:
defaults write com.apple.Dock
orientation -string POSITION
In this command, replacing POSITION with
either "left,""right," or "bottom" will place it
on the respective edge of the display. This
option is fairly redundant with the built-in
options for setting the Dock's position, so it
may not be all too useful; however, a second
defaults command will allow you to pin the
Dock to the various corners of the display, by
specifying it be pinned to the start, middle,
or end of the display edge. To set this, you
will need to run the "defaults" command in
the following manner:
defaults write com.apple.Dock pinning -
string POSITION
In this command, replace POSITION with
"start" to nest the Dock to the left of the
bottom edge, or to the top of either side of
the display; replace it with "end" to reverse
this and place to the right of the bottom
edge, or to the bottom corner of either side.
To undo these modifications, simply use
"middle" as the pinning location.
When finished with running either of these
commands, you will need to re-launch the
Dock in order for them to take effect, which
can be done by restarting your system, logging out and back into your account, using Activity Monitor to force-quit the Dock process for your account, or by running the following command in the Terminal:
killall Dock
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