
- #Macvim split screen shortcut full
- #Macvim split screen shortcut password
- #Macvim split screen shortcut plus
- #Macvim split screen shortcut windows
Move the cursor to the beginning of the next word. Select all items in a document or window.ĭelete the selected item and move it to the Recycle Bin. Open the shortcut menu for the active window.Ĭlose the active document (in apps that are full-screen and let you have multiple documents open at the same time).
#Macvim split screen shortcut password
Show your password on the sign-in screen.Ĭycle through items in the order in which they were opened.ĭisplay properties for the selected item. Search for a file or folder in File Explorer.ĭisplay the address bar list in File Explorer.Ĭycle through screen elements in a window or on the desktop. Cmd+Alt+← = 1/2 vertical left side of the screenĬmd+Alt+→ = 1/2 vertical right side of the screenĬmd+Alt+↑ = Maximize - Fills the whole screen.Ĭmd+Alt+↓ = Move to the next screen (Moom can retain the last position/size, which is nice, especially if your screens have different resolutions).Close the active item, or exit the active app.I tend to always set these as my basic shortcuts: I do understand that some people might want to would want to use it. Better to just use shortcuts or dragging or what ever.
#Macvim split screen shortcut full
These always sound cool at first, but I'm not going to leave a phone screen open for a full day at work, you kidding me? And if I have to then open the phone/app to do window management on mac.
#Macvim split screen shortcut windows
If dragging windows is your thing, Mosaic is definitely the go to app.

If you give multiple "actions" the same shortcut, they become chained. Then you can you can "restore" that layout via shortcut or from a context menu.

Which basically means that you save the position of specific windows. It works by selecting the area you desire to fill in the screen by using a grid. You can for example drag a window to the left side of your screen and drop it to resize it to the left half of the screen. Snap to screen edges (kinda like in Windows).
#Macvim split screen shortcut plus
Hover over the green plus to get a context menu with the custom positions, layouts and the resize grid.

I've not been a big fan of the split view, because that "locks" you into fullscreen mode, which I am also not a fan of. This post from Stack Overflow has an answer that seems to outlin the only way to do it (as far as I know): bash - Manipulate OS X windows with script - Stack Overflow.
