How to prevent macOS from putting icons on some areas of the desktop?Automatically hide latex aux files in finder (files with a certain extension)Finder hiding specific file by nameFinder folder icon showing items count when emptySee all Apple Hidden FilesWhat determines the label displayed in the “Kind” column of an OS X finder window and in search box labeled “Kind”?Search for large files and foldersHow do Icon? files work and how to create your ownHow to view any folder as if it was desktopDesktop shows only background image – how to return to default behavior?Why does macOS create file mounts for each app?
How is Sword Coast North governed?
Why doesn't this proof show that the operation on a factor group is well-defined?
Must I upgrade this bathroom circuit from 15 amps to 20 amps?
A game of red and black
Is this mechanically safe?
Adjective for when skills are not improving and I'm depressed about it
Skipping same old introductions
Can I say "Gesundheit" if someone is coughing?
How can flights operated by the same company have such different prices when marketed by another?
Applying for mortgage when living together but only one will be on the mortgage
Can machine learning learn a function like finding maximum from a list?
How do Canadians get a visa to go to Saudi Arabia?
How to escape forward slashes?
How to prevent a single-element caster from being useless against immune foes?
Should students have access to past exams or an exam bank?
Security measures that could plausibly last 150+ years?
Error with uppercase in titlesec's label field
Reasons for using monsters as bioweapons
Adding a (stair/baby) gate without facing walls
PI 4 screen rotation from the terminal
When did J.K. Rowling decide to make Ron and Hermione a couple?
What is the significance of $(logname)?
Should I put my name first or last in the team members list?
Has the US government provided details on plans to deal with AIDS and childhood cancer?
How to prevent macOS from putting icons on some areas of the desktop?
Automatically hide latex aux files in finder (files with a certain extension)Finder hiding specific file by nameFinder folder icon showing items count when emptySee all Apple Hidden FilesWhat determines the label displayed in the “Kind” column of an OS X finder window and in search box labeled “Kind”?Search for large files and foldersHow do Icon? files work and how to create your ownHow to view any folder as if it was desktopDesktop shows only background image – how to return to default behavior?Why does macOS create file mounts for each app?
.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;
I have a 49" 5120x1440 ultrawide monitor with some windows always open on the sides and I don't want any kind of item hidden behind them (for example, mounted external drive, downloaded/copied file, etc...)
The worst case is when I save or move something to the Desktop and I waste a lot of time trying to understand why I can't see the file – because it's hidden, say, behind my music player window.
Right now I've badly solved the issue with a very inelegant solution, which is filling those areas with empty files so that nothing goes over there, the problem is that those then show up on Finder and it gets kind of annoying when I have to work with files on the Desktop
So, right now, there are two acceptable solutions for this:
Find a way to tell macOS not to put icons on a certain area of the screen
OR
Find a way to tell Finder to not show, say, files with zero byte dimension or with a file name starting with "empty" or whatever filter we can apply.
EDIT: this would not work as there is no way to tell Finder to show a certain type of file on the Desktop but not in a Finder window. Disregard this option.
Here's a picture to better show you the problem and how I've partially (ie: badly) solved it for now:
Thanks!
finder desktop file
|
show 2 more comments
I have a 49" 5120x1440 ultrawide monitor with some windows always open on the sides and I don't want any kind of item hidden behind them (for example, mounted external drive, downloaded/copied file, etc...)
The worst case is when I save or move something to the Desktop and I waste a lot of time trying to understand why I can't see the file – because it's hidden, say, behind my music player window.
Right now I've badly solved the issue with a very inelegant solution, which is filling those areas with empty files so that nothing goes over there, the problem is that those then show up on Finder and it gets kind of annoying when I have to work with files on the Desktop
So, right now, there are two acceptable solutions for this:
Find a way to tell macOS not to put icons on a certain area of the screen
OR
Find a way to tell Finder to not show, say, files with zero byte dimension or with a file name starting with "empty" or whatever filter we can apply.
EDIT: this would not work as there is no way to tell Finder to show a certain type of file on the Desktop but not in a Finder window. Disregard this option.
Here's a picture to better show you the problem and how I've partially (ie: badly) solved it for now:
Thanks!
finder desktop file
1
Two approaches you can take here: 1. Keep a Finder window open with Desktop folder showing, so that you can easily get to the desired file. 2. Use Hot corner or a keyboard shortcut to show Desktop contents to easily access it.
– Nimesh Neema
12 hours ago
1
Ugh! This is Mac, not Windows. Please resist the temptation to strew your desktop with 'shortcuts'. there are so many better ways to organise your workflow.
– Tetsujin
12 hours ago
@NimeshNeema the Finder window always open is a good alternative I haven't thought of! it would take some space but I can reorganize thing around, although it doesn't really excite me. I have gestures to do most mission control things on the fly, I just 4 finger swipe up to show all windows and 4 finger swipe down to show desktop, but that's not a good solution.
– Luca
12 hours ago
@Tetsujin some old habits won't ever die, to me putting something on the desktop is still the most efficient way to work on it before putting it away.
– Luca
12 hours ago
It's somewhere to park stuff you'll be done with by the end of the day - it's not somewhere to start making pretty patterns.
– Tetsujin
11 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
I have a 49" 5120x1440 ultrawide monitor with some windows always open on the sides and I don't want any kind of item hidden behind them (for example, mounted external drive, downloaded/copied file, etc...)
The worst case is when I save or move something to the Desktop and I waste a lot of time trying to understand why I can't see the file – because it's hidden, say, behind my music player window.
Right now I've badly solved the issue with a very inelegant solution, which is filling those areas with empty files so that nothing goes over there, the problem is that those then show up on Finder and it gets kind of annoying when I have to work with files on the Desktop
So, right now, there are two acceptable solutions for this:
Find a way to tell macOS not to put icons on a certain area of the screen
OR
Find a way to tell Finder to not show, say, files with zero byte dimension or with a file name starting with "empty" or whatever filter we can apply.
EDIT: this would not work as there is no way to tell Finder to show a certain type of file on the Desktop but not in a Finder window. Disregard this option.
Here's a picture to better show you the problem and how I've partially (ie: badly) solved it for now:
Thanks!
finder desktop file
I have a 49" 5120x1440 ultrawide monitor with some windows always open on the sides and I don't want any kind of item hidden behind them (for example, mounted external drive, downloaded/copied file, etc...)
The worst case is when I save or move something to the Desktop and I waste a lot of time trying to understand why I can't see the file – because it's hidden, say, behind my music player window.
Right now I've badly solved the issue with a very inelegant solution, which is filling those areas with empty files so that nothing goes over there, the problem is that those then show up on Finder and it gets kind of annoying when I have to work with files on the Desktop
So, right now, there are two acceptable solutions for this:
Find a way to tell macOS not to put icons on a certain area of the screen
OR
Find a way to tell Finder to not show, say, files with zero byte dimension or with a file name starting with "empty" or whatever filter we can apply.
EDIT: this would not work as there is no way to tell Finder to show a certain type of file on the Desktop but not in a Finder window. Disregard this option.
Here's a picture to better show you the problem and how I've partially (ie: badly) solved it for now:
Thanks!
finder desktop file
finder desktop file
edited 12 hours ago
Nimesh Neema
23.6k9 gold badges61 silver badges92 bronze badges
23.6k9 gold badges61 silver badges92 bronze badges
asked 12 hours ago
LucaLuca
283 bronze badges
283 bronze badges
1
Two approaches you can take here: 1. Keep a Finder window open with Desktop folder showing, so that you can easily get to the desired file. 2. Use Hot corner or a keyboard shortcut to show Desktop contents to easily access it.
– Nimesh Neema
12 hours ago
1
Ugh! This is Mac, not Windows. Please resist the temptation to strew your desktop with 'shortcuts'. there are so many better ways to organise your workflow.
– Tetsujin
12 hours ago
@NimeshNeema the Finder window always open is a good alternative I haven't thought of! it would take some space but I can reorganize thing around, although it doesn't really excite me. I have gestures to do most mission control things on the fly, I just 4 finger swipe up to show all windows and 4 finger swipe down to show desktop, but that's not a good solution.
– Luca
12 hours ago
@Tetsujin some old habits won't ever die, to me putting something on the desktop is still the most efficient way to work on it before putting it away.
– Luca
12 hours ago
It's somewhere to park stuff you'll be done with by the end of the day - it's not somewhere to start making pretty patterns.
– Tetsujin
11 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
1
Two approaches you can take here: 1. Keep a Finder window open with Desktop folder showing, so that you can easily get to the desired file. 2. Use Hot corner or a keyboard shortcut to show Desktop contents to easily access it.
– Nimesh Neema
12 hours ago
1
Ugh! This is Mac, not Windows. Please resist the temptation to strew your desktop with 'shortcuts'. there are so many better ways to organise your workflow.
– Tetsujin
12 hours ago
@NimeshNeema the Finder window always open is a good alternative I haven't thought of! it would take some space but I can reorganize thing around, although it doesn't really excite me. I have gestures to do most mission control things on the fly, I just 4 finger swipe up to show all windows and 4 finger swipe down to show desktop, but that's not a good solution.
– Luca
12 hours ago
@Tetsujin some old habits won't ever die, to me putting something on the desktop is still the most efficient way to work on it before putting it away.
– Luca
12 hours ago
It's somewhere to park stuff you'll be done with by the end of the day - it's not somewhere to start making pretty patterns.
– Tetsujin
11 hours ago
1
1
Two approaches you can take here: 1. Keep a Finder window open with Desktop folder showing, so that you can easily get to the desired file. 2. Use Hot corner or a keyboard shortcut to show Desktop contents to easily access it.
– Nimesh Neema
12 hours ago
Two approaches you can take here: 1. Keep a Finder window open with Desktop folder showing, so that you can easily get to the desired file. 2. Use Hot corner or a keyboard shortcut to show Desktop contents to easily access it.
– Nimesh Neema
12 hours ago
1
1
Ugh! This is Mac, not Windows. Please resist the temptation to strew your desktop with 'shortcuts'. there are so many better ways to organise your workflow.
– Tetsujin
12 hours ago
Ugh! This is Mac, not Windows. Please resist the temptation to strew your desktop with 'shortcuts'. there are so many better ways to organise your workflow.
– Tetsujin
12 hours ago
@NimeshNeema the Finder window always open is a good alternative I haven't thought of! it would take some space but I can reorganize thing around, although it doesn't really excite me. I have gestures to do most mission control things on the fly, I just 4 finger swipe up to show all windows and 4 finger swipe down to show desktop, but that's not a good solution.
– Luca
12 hours ago
@NimeshNeema the Finder window always open is a good alternative I haven't thought of! it would take some space but I can reorganize thing around, although it doesn't really excite me. I have gestures to do most mission control things on the fly, I just 4 finger swipe up to show all windows and 4 finger swipe down to show desktop, but that's not a good solution.
– Luca
12 hours ago
@Tetsujin some old habits won't ever die, to me putting something on the desktop is still the most efficient way to work on it before putting it away.
– Luca
12 hours ago
@Tetsujin some old habits won't ever die, to me putting something on the desktop is still the most efficient way to work on it before putting it away.
– Luca
12 hours ago
It's somewhere to park stuff you'll be done with by the end of the day - it's not somewhere to start making pretty patterns.
– Tetsujin
11 hours ago
It's somewhere to park stuff you'll be done with by the end of the day - it's not somewhere to start making pretty patterns.
– Tetsujin
11 hours ago
|
show 2 more comments
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
What about creating a smart folder “Desktop” and put it onto your sidebar. Try omitting parameters like show only files larger than 1kb. If you go to more options/show more from the query menu in finder... you can add a ton of parameters including “raw” query. Raw can be used to make some really complicated and effective searches. I think you can even extract the raw query from a saved smart folder.
1
Wouldn't it be better to make one answer by editing?
– bmike♦
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Not sure I really understand the goal here, so this solution may not work for you (this may still work for someone else). Not sure why you want to see all those icons but ... don't want to see all those icons. ¯_(ツ)_/¯
Yeah. I prolly got that part wrong.
Save them in a folder. It doesn't matter much what you call this folder or where you place it. Drag it into both the dock on the right side and into the side-bar.
When saving/moving/pasting, use the sidebar to quickly change the location to the special folder. When accessing the files use the dock. Use the folder view 'List' in the dock if shorter than the height of you screen or grid if list is too long; but I would avoid stacks in the Dock.
To avoid using the Dock, use a service script that opens the folder in Finder and attach a keyboard shortcut to it. One keystroke and you have easy access but no windows throwing shade on your icons. You can also have the service change the Finder-window view on open.
Look at stacks (not Dock stacks, but the new Desktop stacks). I have not explored this (all Desktop functions disabled on my rig) but it basically does some of the organizing for you. One click to access and one click to open ... I think. Worth a quick look and a try anyway. Only one place to go look for the files, if the rules for stacking meet your needs.
Oh, and finally ('bout time, right?), explore Smart Folders since specifying rules like file type, file size, name includes, and actual location (and so much more) are what Smart Folders are for. I think you can add one to your Desktop that finds all the files that meet your criteria; but save the files somewhere else, including maybe where they will ultimately be saved when the current project is closing. Then nothing to move off the Desktop when done with the files. Next project: change the criteria.
[Whew] SSL
add a comment |
If you add a period the beginning of the empty file names, they will become a hidden file. Then can be viewed again by pressing cmd+alt+opt+period. However if you work often while showing “hidden files” there is a step further you can hide them by flagging the items as hidden. You can do so in terminal...
chflags hidden /path/to/file
In your case you may do something like this~
chflags hidden ~/Desktop/empty*
You can use chflags nohidden to return the file.
1
The issue is that by doing this they will disappear from the Desktop as well, thus getting us back to square 1.
– Luca
8 hours ago
@Luca hmmm... What if you take tiny little screen shots of every file and replace it with its icon lol.
– Theologin
7 hours ago
1
LOL, I mean, that would look... interesting, to say the least. Unfortunately that's completely missing the point, as I'm ok with all that garbage on the Desktop because there are windows covering them. What irks me is that if I have to do something in Finder in the Desktop folder they'll all show up. Right now I've changed the names to "z" so that if I sort by name they'll all still at the bottom and won't be bothering me too much. Still, I'd prefer a neater solution.
– Luca
6 hours ago
add a comment |
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
3 Answers
3
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
What about creating a smart folder “Desktop” and put it onto your sidebar. Try omitting parameters like show only files larger than 1kb. If you go to more options/show more from the query menu in finder... you can add a ton of parameters including “raw” query. Raw can be used to make some really complicated and effective searches. I think you can even extract the raw query from a saved smart folder.
1
Wouldn't it be better to make one answer by editing?
– bmike♦
6 hours ago
add a comment |
What about creating a smart folder “Desktop” and put it onto your sidebar. Try omitting parameters like show only files larger than 1kb. If you go to more options/show more from the query menu in finder... you can add a ton of parameters including “raw” query. Raw can be used to make some really complicated and effective searches. I think you can even extract the raw query from a saved smart folder.
1
Wouldn't it be better to make one answer by editing?
– bmike♦
6 hours ago
add a comment |
What about creating a smart folder “Desktop” and put it onto your sidebar. Try omitting parameters like show only files larger than 1kb. If you go to more options/show more from the query menu in finder... you can add a ton of parameters including “raw” query. Raw can be used to make some really complicated and effective searches. I think you can even extract the raw query from a saved smart folder.
What about creating a smart folder “Desktop” and put it onto your sidebar. Try omitting parameters like show only files larger than 1kb. If you go to more options/show more from the query menu in finder... you can add a ton of parameters including “raw” query. Raw can be used to make some really complicated and effective searches. I think you can even extract the raw query from a saved smart folder.
answered 6 hours ago
TheologinTheologin
1214 bronze badges
1214 bronze badges
1
Wouldn't it be better to make one answer by editing?
– bmike♦
6 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Wouldn't it be better to make one answer by editing?
– bmike♦
6 hours ago
1
1
Wouldn't it be better to make one answer by editing?
– bmike♦
6 hours ago
Wouldn't it be better to make one answer by editing?
– bmike♦
6 hours ago
add a comment |
Not sure I really understand the goal here, so this solution may not work for you (this may still work for someone else). Not sure why you want to see all those icons but ... don't want to see all those icons. ¯_(ツ)_/¯
Yeah. I prolly got that part wrong.
Save them in a folder. It doesn't matter much what you call this folder or where you place it. Drag it into both the dock on the right side and into the side-bar.
When saving/moving/pasting, use the sidebar to quickly change the location to the special folder. When accessing the files use the dock. Use the folder view 'List' in the dock if shorter than the height of you screen or grid if list is too long; but I would avoid stacks in the Dock.
To avoid using the Dock, use a service script that opens the folder in Finder and attach a keyboard shortcut to it. One keystroke and you have easy access but no windows throwing shade on your icons. You can also have the service change the Finder-window view on open.
Look at stacks (not Dock stacks, but the new Desktop stacks). I have not explored this (all Desktop functions disabled on my rig) but it basically does some of the organizing for you. One click to access and one click to open ... I think. Worth a quick look and a try anyway. Only one place to go look for the files, if the rules for stacking meet your needs.
Oh, and finally ('bout time, right?), explore Smart Folders since specifying rules like file type, file size, name includes, and actual location (and so much more) are what Smart Folders are for. I think you can add one to your Desktop that finds all the files that meet your criteria; but save the files somewhere else, including maybe where they will ultimately be saved when the current project is closing. Then nothing to move off the Desktop when done with the files. Next project: change the criteria.
[Whew] SSL
add a comment |
Not sure I really understand the goal here, so this solution may not work for you (this may still work for someone else). Not sure why you want to see all those icons but ... don't want to see all those icons. ¯_(ツ)_/¯
Yeah. I prolly got that part wrong.
Save them in a folder. It doesn't matter much what you call this folder or where you place it. Drag it into both the dock on the right side and into the side-bar.
When saving/moving/pasting, use the sidebar to quickly change the location to the special folder. When accessing the files use the dock. Use the folder view 'List' in the dock if shorter than the height of you screen or grid if list is too long; but I would avoid stacks in the Dock.
To avoid using the Dock, use a service script that opens the folder in Finder and attach a keyboard shortcut to it. One keystroke and you have easy access but no windows throwing shade on your icons. You can also have the service change the Finder-window view on open.
Look at stacks (not Dock stacks, but the new Desktop stacks). I have not explored this (all Desktop functions disabled on my rig) but it basically does some of the organizing for you. One click to access and one click to open ... I think. Worth a quick look and a try anyway. Only one place to go look for the files, if the rules for stacking meet your needs.
Oh, and finally ('bout time, right?), explore Smart Folders since specifying rules like file type, file size, name includes, and actual location (and so much more) are what Smart Folders are for. I think you can add one to your Desktop that finds all the files that meet your criteria; but save the files somewhere else, including maybe where they will ultimately be saved when the current project is closing. Then nothing to move off the Desktop when done with the files. Next project: change the criteria.
[Whew] SSL
add a comment |
Not sure I really understand the goal here, so this solution may not work for you (this may still work for someone else). Not sure why you want to see all those icons but ... don't want to see all those icons. ¯_(ツ)_/¯
Yeah. I prolly got that part wrong.
Save them in a folder. It doesn't matter much what you call this folder or where you place it. Drag it into both the dock on the right side and into the side-bar.
When saving/moving/pasting, use the sidebar to quickly change the location to the special folder. When accessing the files use the dock. Use the folder view 'List' in the dock if shorter than the height of you screen or grid if list is too long; but I would avoid stacks in the Dock.
To avoid using the Dock, use a service script that opens the folder in Finder and attach a keyboard shortcut to it. One keystroke and you have easy access but no windows throwing shade on your icons. You can also have the service change the Finder-window view on open.
Look at stacks (not Dock stacks, but the new Desktop stacks). I have not explored this (all Desktop functions disabled on my rig) but it basically does some of the organizing for you. One click to access and one click to open ... I think. Worth a quick look and a try anyway. Only one place to go look for the files, if the rules for stacking meet your needs.
Oh, and finally ('bout time, right?), explore Smart Folders since specifying rules like file type, file size, name includes, and actual location (and so much more) are what Smart Folders are for. I think you can add one to your Desktop that finds all the files that meet your criteria; but save the files somewhere else, including maybe where they will ultimately be saved when the current project is closing. Then nothing to move off the Desktop when done with the files. Next project: change the criteria.
[Whew] SSL
Not sure I really understand the goal here, so this solution may not work for you (this may still work for someone else). Not sure why you want to see all those icons but ... don't want to see all those icons. ¯_(ツ)_/¯
Yeah. I prolly got that part wrong.
Save them in a folder. It doesn't matter much what you call this folder or where you place it. Drag it into both the dock on the right side and into the side-bar.
When saving/moving/pasting, use the sidebar to quickly change the location to the special folder. When accessing the files use the dock. Use the folder view 'List' in the dock if shorter than the height of you screen or grid if list is too long; but I would avoid stacks in the Dock.
To avoid using the Dock, use a service script that opens the folder in Finder and attach a keyboard shortcut to it. One keystroke and you have easy access but no windows throwing shade on your icons. You can also have the service change the Finder-window view on open.
Look at stacks (not Dock stacks, but the new Desktop stacks). I have not explored this (all Desktop functions disabled on my rig) but it basically does some of the organizing for you. One click to access and one click to open ... I think. Worth a quick look and a try anyway. Only one place to go look for the files, if the rules for stacking meet your needs.
Oh, and finally ('bout time, right?), explore Smart Folders since specifying rules like file type, file size, name includes, and actual location (and so much more) are what Smart Folders are for. I think you can add one to your Desktop that finds all the files that meet your criteria; but save the files somewhere else, including maybe where they will ultimately be saved when the current project is closing. Then nothing to move off the Desktop when done with the files. Next project: change the criteria.
[Whew] SSL
edited 1 hour ago
answered 1 hour ago
D. GerenD. Geren
545 bronze badges
545 bronze badges
add a comment |
add a comment |
If you add a period the beginning of the empty file names, they will become a hidden file. Then can be viewed again by pressing cmd+alt+opt+period. However if you work often while showing “hidden files” there is a step further you can hide them by flagging the items as hidden. You can do so in terminal...
chflags hidden /path/to/file
In your case you may do something like this~
chflags hidden ~/Desktop/empty*
You can use chflags nohidden to return the file.
1
The issue is that by doing this they will disappear from the Desktop as well, thus getting us back to square 1.
– Luca
8 hours ago
@Luca hmmm... What if you take tiny little screen shots of every file and replace it with its icon lol.
– Theologin
7 hours ago
1
LOL, I mean, that would look... interesting, to say the least. Unfortunately that's completely missing the point, as I'm ok with all that garbage on the Desktop because there are windows covering them. What irks me is that if I have to do something in Finder in the Desktop folder they'll all show up. Right now I've changed the names to "z" so that if I sort by name they'll all still at the bottom and won't be bothering me too much. Still, I'd prefer a neater solution.
– Luca
6 hours ago
add a comment |
If you add a period the beginning of the empty file names, they will become a hidden file. Then can be viewed again by pressing cmd+alt+opt+period. However if you work often while showing “hidden files” there is a step further you can hide them by flagging the items as hidden. You can do so in terminal...
chflags hidden /path/to/file
In your case you may do something like this~
chflags hidden ~/Desktop/empty*
You can use chflags nohidden to return the file.
1
The issue is that by doing this they will disappear from the Desktop as well, thus getting us back to square 1.
– Luca
8 hours ago
@Luca hmmm... What if you take tiny little screen shots of every file and replace it with its icon lol.
– Theologin
7 hours ago
1
LOL, I mean, that would look... interesting, to say the least. Unfortunately that's completely missing the point, as I'm ok with all that garbage on the Desktop because there are windows covering them. What irks me is that if I have to do something in Finder in the Desktop folder they'll all show up. Right now I've changed the names to "z" so that if I sort by name they'll all still at the bottom and won't be bothering me too much. Still, I'd prefer a neater solution.
– Luca
6 hours ago
add a comment |
If you add a period the beginning of the empty file names, they will become a hidden file. Then can be viewed again by pressing cmd+alt+opt+period. However if you work often while showing “hidden files” there is a step further you can hide them by flagging the items as hidden. You can do so in terminal...
chflags hidden /path/to/file
In your case you may do something like this~
chflags hidden ~/Desktop/empty*
You can use chflags nohidden to return the file.
If you add a period the beginning of the empty file names, they will become a hidden file. Then can be viewed again by pressing cmd+alt+opt+period. However if you work often while showing “hidden files” there is a step further you can hide them by flagging the items as hidden. You can do so in terminal...
chflags hidden /path/to/file
In your case you may do something like this~
chflags hidden ~/Desktop/empty*
You can use chflags nohidden to return the file.
answered 10 hours ago
TheologinTheologin
1214 bronze badges
1214 bronze badges
1
The issue is that by doing this they will disappear from the Desktop as well, thus getting us back to square 1.
– Luca
8 hours ago
@Luca hmmm... What if you take tiny little screen shots of every file and replace it with its icon lol.
– Theologin
7 hours ago
1
LOL, I mean, that would look... interesting, to say the least. Unfortunately that's completely missing the point, as I'm ok with all that garbage on the Desktop because there are windows covering them. What irks me is that if I have to do something in Finder in the Desktop folder they'll all show up. Right now I've changed the names to "z" so that if I sort by name they'll all still at the bottom and won't be bothering me too much. Still, I'd prefer a neater solution.
– Luca
6 hours ago
add a comment |
1
The issue is that by doing this they will disappear from the Desktop as well, thus getting us back to square 1.
– Luca
8 hours ago
@Luca hmmm... What if you take tiny little screen shots of every file and replace it with its icon lol.
– Theologin
7 hours ago
1
LOL, I mean, that would look... interesting, to say the least. Unfortunately that's completely missing the point, as I'm ok with all that garbage on the Desktop because there are windows covering them. What irks me is that if I have to do something in Finder in the Desktop folder they'll all show up. Right now I've changed the names to "z" so that if I sort by name they'll all still at the bottom and won't be bothering me too much. Still, I'd prefer a neater solution.
– Luca
6 hours ago
1
1
The issue is that by doing this they will disappear from the Desktop as well, thus getting us back to square 1.
– Luca
8 hours ago
The issue is that by doing this they will disappear from the Desktop as well, thus getting us back to square 1.
– Luca
8 hours ago
@Luca hmmm... What if you take tiny little screen shots of every file and replace it with its icon lol.
– Theologin
7 hours ago
@Luca hmmm... What if you take tiny little screen shots of every file and replace it with its icon lol.
– Theologin
7 hours ago
1
1
LOL, I mean, that would look... interesting, to say the least. Unfortunately that's completely missing the point, as I'm ok with all that garbage on the Desktop because there are windows covering them. What irks me is that if I have to do something in Finder in the Desktop folder they'll all show up. Right now I've changed the names to "z" so that if I sort by name they'll all still at the bottom and won't be bothering me too much. Still, I'd prefer a neater solution.
– Luca
6 hours ago
LOL, I mean, that would look... interesting, to say the least. Unfortunately that's completely missing the point, as I'm ok with all that garbage on the Desktop because there are windows covering them. What irks me is that if I have to do something in Finder in the Desktop folder they'll all show up. Right now I've changed the names to "z" so that if I sort by name they'll all still at the bottom and won't be bothering me too much. Still, I'd prefer a neater solution.
– Luca
6 hours ago
add a comment |
1
Two approaches you can take here: 1. Keep a Finder window open with Desktop folder showing, so that you can easily get to the desired file. 2. Use Hot corner or a keyboard shortcut to show Desktop contents to easily access it.
– Nimesh Neema
12 hours ago
1
Ugh! This is Mac, not Windows. Please resist the temptation to strew your desktop with 'shortcuts'. there are so many better ways to organise your workflow.
– Tetsujin
12 hours ago
@NimeshNeema the Finder window always open is a good alternative I haven't thought of! it would take some space but I can reorganize thing around, although it doesn't really excite me. I have gestures to do most mission control things on the fly, I just 4 finger swipe up to show all windows and 4 finger swipe down to show desktop, but that's not a good solution.
– Luca
12 hours ago
@Tetsujin some old habits won't ever die, to me putting something on the desktop is still the most efficient way to work on it before putting it away.
– Luca
12 hours ago
It's somewhere to park stuff you'll be done with by the end of the day - it's not somewhere to start making pretty patterns.
– Tetsujin
11 hours ago