macOS: Name for app shortcut screen found by pinching with thumb and three fingers Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) Should an RSS feed of hot network questions feed any chat room(s) here?How do I get three finger gestures working again in Twitter for Mac after installing Lion?After my MacBook Pro sleeps some gestures don't work anymoreIs it possible to reassign the “Pinch with thumb and three fingers” gesture to activate Dashboard instead of Launchpad?Disable animation for “Swipe between full-screen apps”?OSX Yosemite Can't disable four-finger swipeDrag with three fingers missing in OS X 10.11 Beta “El Capitan” (15A215h)A shortcut for Merge all Windows on macOS SierraSet the hostname/computer name for macOSmacOS: Identify tool and keyboard shortcutQuickly save Screenshot in MacOS Mojave with keyboard Shortcut

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macOS: Name for app shortcut screen found by pinching with thumb and three fingers

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macOS: Name for app shortcut screen found by pinching with thumb and three fingers



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)
Should an RSS feed of hot network questions feed any chat room(s) here?How do I get three finger gestures working again in Twitter for Mac after installing Lion?After my MacBook Pro sleeps some gestures don't work anymoreIs it possible to reassign the “Pinch with thumb and three fingers” gesture to activate Dashboard instead of Launchpad?Disable animation for “Swipe between full-screen apps”?OSX Yosemite Can't disable four-finger swipeDrag with three fingers missing in OS X 10.11 Beta “El Capitan” (15A215h)A shortcut for Merge all Windows on macOS SierraSet the hostname/computer name for macOSmacOS: Identify tool and keyboard shortcutQuickly save Screenshot in MacOS Mojave with keyboard Shortcut



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1















In macOS, what is the name for the app shortcut screen (with all the installed apps icons displayed, taking up the whole screen) found by pinching with thumb and three fingers together (or sliding-in 4 fingers together, alternatively) on Trackpad?










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Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
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  • Note someone edited the answer into the question tags.

    – user90735
    1 hour ago

















1















In macOS, what is the name for the app shortcut screen (with all the installed apps icons displayed, taking up the whole screen) found by pinching with thumb and three fingers together (or sliding-in 4 fingers together, alternatively) on Trackpad?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.




















  • Note someone edited the answer into the question tags.

    – user90735
    1 hour ago













1












1








1








In macOS, what is the name for the app shortcut screen (with all the installed apps icons displayed, taking up the whole screen) found by pinching with thumb and three fingers together (or sliding-in 4 fingers together, alternatively) on Trackpad?










share|improve this question









New contributor




Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












In macOS, what is the name for the app shortcut screen (with all the installed apps icons displayed, taking up the whole screen) found by pinching with thumb and three fingers together (or sliding-in 4 fingers together, alternatively) on Trackpad?







macos trackpad gesture






share|improve this question









New contributor




Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.











share|improve this question









New contributor




Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited 36 mins ago









Nimesh Neema

17.3k74879




17.3k74879






New contributor




Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.









asked 2 hours ago









Timothy SteeleTimothy Steele

1094




1094




New contributor




Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.





New contributor





Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.






Timothy Steele is a new contributor to this site. Take care in asking for clarification, commenting, and answering.
Check out our Code of Conduct.












  • Note someone edited the answer into the question tags.

    – user90735
    1 hour ago

















  • Note someone edited the answer into the question tags.

    – user90735
    1 hour ago
















Note someone edited the answer into the question tags.

– user90735
1 hour ago





Note someone edited the answer into the question tags.

– user90735
1 hour ago










2 Answers
2






active

oldest

votes


















2














I use this page to determine what each swipe does. What you're describing is called "Launchpad".



  • Use Multi-Touch gestures on your Mac

It looks like this when you open it:



screenshot of Launchpad

sslp



This is the swipe you're describing

                    ss1



References



  • macOS: Reset Launchpad Apps Order





share|improve this answer




















  • 1





    Nice Apple Support document, I've saved it my Documents and bookmarked it in Safari. +1

    – user3439894
    2 hours ago







  • 1





    That's funny, I reviewed that webpage in my initial google search, but I was skimming and looking for "4 fingers" and this gesture is described as "thumb and three fingers". I actually use 4 fingers and not my thumb. The nuances!

    – Timothy Steele
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    @TimothySteele - me too, I use 4 fingers when I summon it, that's what made me think it was what you were describing 8-).

    – slm
    2 hours ago






  • 1





    "when I summon it" I like the word 'summon' even more than I like the word 'shortcut' :)

    – Timothy Steele
    1 hour ago






  • 1





    @TimothySteele - it's what feels like it fits when you do it. I feel like I'm summoning a genie when I swipe.

    – slm
    1 hour ago


















2














The screen is called Launchpad and is a feature built-into macOS. First introduced in Mac OS X Lion 10.7, it displays a grid of icons corresponding to installed apps. This feature was originally inspired from iOS which displays a similar grid of icons for installed apps.



This gesture is pre-defined for Trackpad and can be turned on/off under System Preferences → Trackpad → More Gestures





There are other easy ways to invoke Launchpad too, which can be helpful on Macs without a Trackpad:




  1. Keyboard: Press the special F4 key on your MacBook's built in keyboard or Apple keyboard. On newer hardware introduced after Mac OS X Lion was released, the key shows a grid of square.




  1. Dock: Use the Launchpad icon in the Dock. The icon for the app is present by default in the Dock and looks like this:




  1. Spotlight: Launchpad can also be invoked via Spotlight search:




  1. Applications: Launchpad is available just like other built-in apps and can be found in /Applications directory in Finder. To invoke, double click the app icon.



To learn more about Launchpad, go through the linked Apple Support articles:



  • Use Launchpad on your Mac


  • Use Launchpad to view and open apps on Mac






share|improve this answer
































    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes








    2 Answers
    2






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    I use this page to determine what each swipe does. What you're describing is called "Launchpad".



    • Use Multi-Touch gestures on your Mac

    It looks like this when you open it:



    screenshot of Launchpad

    sslp



    This is the swipe you're describing

                        ss1



    References



    • macOS: Reset Launchpad Apps Order





    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      Nice Apple Support document, I've saved it my Documents and bookmarked it in Safari. +1

      – user3439894
      2 hours ago







    • 1





      That's funny, I reviewed that webpage in my initial google search, but I was skimming and looking for "4 fingers" and this gesture is described as "thumb and three fingers". I actually use 4 fingers and not my thumb. The nuances!

      – Timothy Steele
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - me too, I use 4 fingers when I summon it, that's what made me think it was what you were describing 8-).

      – slm
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      "when I summon it" I like the word 'summon' even more than I like the word 'shortcut' :)

      – Timothy Steele
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - it's what feels like it fits when you do it. I feel like I'm summoning a genie when I swipe.

      – slm
      1 hour ago















    2














    I use this page to determine what each swipe does. What you're describing is called "Launchpad".



    • Use Multi-Touch gestures on your Mac

    It looks like this when you open it:



    screenshot of Launchpad

    sslp



    This is the swipe you're describing

                        ss1



    References



    • macOS: Reset Launchpad Apps Order





    share|improve this answer




















    • 1





      Nice Apple Support document, I've saved it my Documents and bookmarked it in Safari. +1

      – user3439894
      2 hours ago







    • 1





      That's funny, I reviewed that webpage in my initial google search, but I was skimming and looking for "4 fingers" and this gesture is described as "thumb and three fingers". I actually use 4 fingers and not my thumb. The nuances!

      – Timothy Steele
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - me too, I use 4 fingers when I summon it, that's what made me think it was what you were describing 8-).

      – slm
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      "when I summon it" I like the word 'summon' even more than I like the word 'shortcut' :)

      – Timothy Steele
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - it's what feels like it fits when you do it. I feel like I'm summoning a genie when I swipe.

      – slm
      1 hour ago













    2












    2








    2







    I use this page to determine what each swipe does. What you're describing is called "Launchpad".



    • Use Multi-Touch gestures on your Mac

    It looks like this when you open it:



    screenshot of Launchpad

    sslp



    This is the swipe you're describing

                        ss1



    References



    • macOS: Reset Launchpad Apps Order





    share|improve this answer















    I use this page to determine what each swipe does. What you're describing is called "Launchpad".



    • Use Multi-Touch gestures on your Mac

    It looks like this when you open it:



    screenshot of Launchpad

    sslp



    This is the swipe you're describing

                        ss1



    References



    • macOS: Reset Launchpad Apps Order






    share|improve this answer














    share|improve this answer



    share|improve this answer








    edited 2 hours ago

























    answered 2 hours ago









    slmslm

    1,346817




    1,346817







    • 1





      Nice Apple Support document, I've saved it my Documents and bookmarked it in Safari. +1

      – user3439894
      2 hours ago







    • 1





      That's funny, I reviewed that webpage in my initial google search, but I was skimming and looking for "4 fingers" and this gesture is described as "thumb and three fingers". I actually use 4 fingers and not my thumb. The nuances!

      – Timothy Steele
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - me too, I use 4 fingers when I summon it, that's what made me think it was what you were describing 8-).

      – slm
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      "when I summon it" I like the word 'summon' even more than I like the word 'shortcut' :)

      – Timothy Steele
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - it's what feels like it fits when you do it. I feel like I'm summoning a genie when I swipe.

      – slm
      1 hour ago












    • 1





      Nice Apple Support document, I've saved it my Documents and bookmarked it in Safari. +1

      – user3439894
      2 hours ago







    • 1





      That's funny, I reviewed that webpage in my initial google search, but I was skimming and looking for "4 fingers" and this gesture is described as "thumb and three fingers". I actually use 4 fingers and not my thumb. The nuances!

      – Timothy Steele
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - me too, I use 4 fingers when I summon it, that's what made me think it was what you were describing 8-).

      – slm
      2 hours ago






    • 1





      "when I summon it" I like the word 'summon' even more than I like the word 'shortcut' :)

      – Timothy Steele
      1 hour ago






    • 1





      @TimothySteele - it's what feels like it fits when you do it. I feel like I'm summoning a genie when I swipe.

      – slm
      1 hour ago







    1




    1





    Nice Apple Support document, I've saved it my Documents and bookmarked it in Safari. +1

    – user3439894
    2 hours ago






    Nice Apple Support document, I've saved it my Documents and bookmarked it in Safari. +1

    – user3439894
    2 hours ago





    1




    1





    That's funny, I reviewed that webpage in my initial google search, but I was skimming and looking for "4 fingers" and this gesture is described as "thumb and three fingers". I actually use 4 fingers and not my thumb. The nuances!

    – Timothy Steele
    2 hours ago





    That's funny, I reviewed that webpage in my initial google search, but I was skimming and looking for "4 fingers" and this gesture is described as "thumb and three fingers". I actually use 4 fingers and not my thumb. The nuances!

    – Timothy Steele
    2 hours ago




    1




    1





    @TimothySteele - me too, I use 4 fingers when I summon it, that's what made me think it was what you were describing 8-).

    – slm
    2 hours ago





    @TimothySteele - me too, I use 4 fingers when I summon it, that's what made me think it was what you were describing 8-).

    – slm
    2 hours ago




    1




    1





    "when I summon it" I like the word 'summon' even more than I like the word 'shortcut' :)

    – Timothy Steele
    1 hour ago





    "when I summon it" I like the word 'summon' even more than I like the word 'shortcut' :)

    – Timothy Steele
    1 hour ago




    1




    1





    @TimothySteele - it's what feels like it fits when you do it. I feel like I'm summoning a genie when I swipe.

    – slm
    1 hour ago





    @TimothySteele - it's what feels like it fits when you do it. I feel like I'm summoning a genie when I swipe.

    – slm
    1 hour ago













    2














    The screen is called Launchpad and is a feature built-into macOS. First introduced in Mac OS X Lion 10.7, it displays a grid of icons corresponding to installed apps. This feature was originally inspired from iOS which displays a similar grid of icons for installed apps.



    This gesture is pre-defined for Trackpad and can be turned on/off under System Preferences → Trackpad → More Gestures





    There are other easy ways to invoke Launchpad too, which can be helpful on Macs without a Trackpad:




    1. Keyboard: Press the special F4 key on your MacBook's built in keyboard or Apple keyboard. On newer hardware introduced after Mac OS X Lion was released, the key shows a grid of square.




    1. Dock: Use the Launchpad icon in the Dock. The icon for the app is present by default in the Dock and looks like this:




    1. Spotlight: Launchpad can also be invoked via Spotlight search:




    1. Applications: Launchpad is available just like other built-in apps and can be found in /Applications directory in Finder. To invoke, double click the app icon.



    To learn more about Launchpad, go through the linked Apple Support articles:



    • Use Launchpad on your Mac


    • Use Launchpad to view and open apps on Mac






    share|improve this answer





























      2














      The screen is called Launchpad and is a feature built-into macOS. First introduced in Mac OS X Lion 10.7, it displays a grid of icons corresponding to installed apps. This feature was originally inspired from iOS which displays a similar grid of icons for installed apps.



      This gesture is pre-defined for Trackpad and can be turned on/off under System Preferences → Trackpad → More Gestures





      There are other easy ways to invoke Launchpad too, which can be helpful on Macs without a Trackpad:




      1. Keyboard: Press the special F4 key on your MacBook's built in keyboard or Apple keyboard. On newer hardware introduced after Mac OS X Lion was released, the key shows a grid of square.




      1. Dock: Use the Launchpad icon in the Dock. The icon for the app is present by default in the Dock and looks like this:




      1. Spotlight: Launchpad can also be invoked via Spotlight search:




      1. Applications: Launchpad is available just like other built-in apps and can be found in /Applications directory in Finder. To invoke, double click the app icon.



      To learn more about Launchpad, go through the linked Apple Support articles:



      • Use Launchpad on your Mac


      • Use Launchpad to view and open apps on Mac






      share|improve this answer



























        2












        2








        2







        The screen is called Launchpad and is a feature built-into macOS. First introduced in Mac OS X Lion 10.7, it displays a grid of icons corresponding to installed apps. This feature was originally inspired from iOS which displays a similar grid of icons for installed apps.



        This gesture is pre-defined for Trackpad and can be turned on/off under System Preferences → Trackpad → More Gestures





        There are other easy ways to invoke Launchpad too, which can be helpful on Macs without a Trackpad:




        1. Keyboard: Press the special F4 key on your MacBook's built in keyboard or Apple keyboard. On newer hardware introduced after Mac OS X Lion was released, the key shows a grid of square.




        1. Dock: Use the Launchpad icon in the Dock. The icon for the app is present by default in the Dock and looks like this:




        1. Spotlight: Launchpad can also be invoked via Spotlight search:




        1. Applications: Launchpad is available just like other built-in apps and can be found in /Applications directory in Finder. To invoke, double click the app icon.



        To learn more about Launchpad, go through the linked Apple Support articles:



        • Use Launchpad on your Mac


        • Use Launchpad to view and open apps on Mac






        share|improve this answer















        The screen is called Launchpad and is a feature built-into macOS. First introduced in Mac OS X Lion 10.7, it displays a grid of icons corresponding to installed apps. This feature was originally inspired from iOS which displays a similar grid of icons for installed apps.



        This gesture is pre-defined for Trackpad and can be turned on/off under System Preferences → Trackpad → More Gestures





        There are other easy ways to invoke Launchpad too, which can be helpful on Macs without a Trackpad:




        1. Keyboard: Press the special F4 key on your MacBook's built in keyboard or Apple keyboard. On newer hardware introduced after Mac OS X Lion was released, the key shows a grid of square.




        1. Dock: Use the Launchpad icon in the Dock. The icon for the app is present by default in the Dock and looks like this:




        1. Spotlight: Launchpad can also be invoked via Spotlight search:




        1. Applications: Launchpad is available just like other built-in apps and can be found in /Applications directory in Finder. To invoke, double click the app icon.



        To learn more about Launchpad, go through the linked Apple Support articles:



        • Use Launchpad on your Mac


        • Use Launchpad to view and open apps on Mac







        share|improve this answer














        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer








        edited 1 hour ago

























        answered 2 hours ago









        Nimesh NeemaNimesh Neema

        17.3k74879




        17.3k74879













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