

Enter “Zoom” into the “Menu Title” section and then click into the Keyboard Shortcut box to define your keyboard shortcut (Control+Command+= is set in the example).Choose “Keyboard Shortcuts”, then go to “Application Shortcuts” and click + to create a new shortcut.Go to System Preferences and “Keyboard”.Tired of clicking the green button to increase the size of the current window? Set a keyboard shortcut for that instead! You’ll be making your own keyboard shortcut for this one since it isn’t set by default, but what a handy keystroke it becomes once you configure it:

2: Minimize Current Window – Command+Mĭone with the current window for now but don’t want to close it out? Quickly minimize it instead with Command+M, it’ll be sent down into the Dock where you can retrieve it later. To be clear, we’re talking about the `/~ key, which is alongside the 1 key on a standard US qwerty keyboard. Just flip through them all like a deck of cards and stop on the window you want.
#Maximize hotkey windows
Considered a “ must know trick“, the next time you’re buried in a bunch of windows use this keystroke, it is so much faster than pulling down the Window menu and hunting around. Much like you can Command+Tab your way through active applications, you can Command+Tilde your way through active windows in the current application. 1: Flip Between Windows in Current Application – Command+`
