BetterSnapTool sounds like what you need.
That's the one, I never set it up but I will do it at some point this week.
BetterSnapTool sounds like what you need.
What are you trying to do that isn't intuitive? Genuine question.
One thing I wish OS X had was the ability to snap Windows side by side. Find myself using Mission Control and switching back and forth whereas in Windows I'd just snap them next to each other.
Not sure if it is still the case, but the default lack of CUT in Finder was shocking. Just why??
I find OSX horrendous.
Window management is rubbish - Windows is much more straight forward.
Window snapping is rubbish compared to Windows 10.
Finder is dreadful - It is like using an early version of a Linux UI.
Every few months OSX thinks that I have forgotten my password - oddly enough every place else I use that password never complains. Clearly I am wrong.
Apple Key chain rubbish randomly prompts for my password. Entering my password usually doesn't work(silly me and passwords) so I have to press Cancel 100-200 times before it ****s off! This is the main reason why I have given up on using my Macbook(except when I am travelling and have no choice).
I find the UI has a lot of stutter compared to Windows.
I could go on but it is making my blood boil.
Needless to say I won't be buying another Macbook - well unless it comes with Windows as standard.
Currently my 2nd day with macOS and I can definitely agree that windows management is horrible. It doesn't make sense. You cant snap easily, to fullscreen you lose your menu bar, clicking the red x doesnt always quit, windows are separate to apps and minimising also depends on how the app deals with it. It. Is. Horrible.
EDIT: And also the dock shows everything that is open on different desktops.
Currently my 2nd day with macOS and I can definitely agree that windows management is horrible. It doesn't make sense. You cant snap easily, to fullscreen you lose your menu bar, clicking the red x doesnt always quit, windows are separate to apps and minimising also depends on how the app deals with it. It. Is. Horrible.
EDIT: And also the dock shows everything that is open on different desktops.
Did the move about 5 years ago from Windows 7 and definitely prefer Mac OS for personal use and Windows for office use.
Mac OS really shines when you're within the Apple ecosystem so everything just syncs between all your products, admittedly there is probably something out there which does it across diff OS and devices but I'm not clued up on that front.
One thing I really like about macOS is installing a program. You download the dmg, mount it, install it be it drag into Applications or follow the usual next, next finish, then when it's done it asks if you want to delete the downloaded dmg.
Most Windows installers self extract into some temp directory which quite often is not cleaned out (hello NVidia drivers!) so you can end up with GBs of wasted usage.