![]() To be honest I haven't really had a need to use this. ![]() 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).Hover over the green plus to get a context menu with the custom positions, layouts and the resize grid. Doesn't have preset shortcuts, but you can set those yourself and is perhaps more flexible than a lot of other ones in terms of what you can do.Basically does everything that Spectacle does, but has some added functionality and I'd also say it's more flexible.Third party window managers don't work in fullscreen mode, for obvious reasons. The only difference is that third party window managers can't adjust the split by dragging the point where the windows meet, but otherwise I'd say they are way better. My recommendation would be to use a third party window manager. I know people who accidentally started using fullscreen mode when the green ball behavior changed and so they basically keep opening new windows because they get lost in what is already open, which leads to a crazy amount of fullscreen spaces. 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.
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