Stacks are a new feature in Mac OS X Leopard that allow you to access frequently used files directly from the Dock. Files can be dragged into stacks which are premade for Documents and Downloads, or users can create their own stacks. Stacks automatically display files in a fan or grid view and can be customized to always open in a preferred style or sort order.
Stacks are a new feature in Mac OS X Leopard that allow you to access frequently used files directly from the Dock. Files can be dragged into stacks which are premade for Documents and Downloads, or users can create their own stacks. Stacks automatically display files in a fan or grid view and can be customized to always open in a preferred style or sort order.
Stacks are a new feature in Mac OS X Leopard that allow you to access frequently used files directly from the Dock. Files can be dragged into stacks which are premade for Documents and Downloads, or users can create their own stacks. Stacks automatically display files in a fan or grid view and can be customized to always open in a preferred style or sort order.
Stacks are a new feature in Mac OS X Leopard that allow you to access frequently used files directly from the Dock. Files can be dragged into stacks which are premade for Documents and Downloads, or users can create their own stacks. Stacks automatically display files in a fan or grid view and can be customized to always open in a preferred style or sort order.
The Dock in Leopard has a sleek new look and a new feature called Stacks. With Stacks, you can quickly access frequently used files right from the Dock. Stacks are simple to create. Just drag any folderto the right side of the Dock and it becomes a stack. Click a stack and it springs from the Dock in either a fan or a grid. To open a file in a stack, click the file once. Mac OS X Leopard includes two premade stacks called Documents and Downloads. You opened this file from the Documents stack. The Documents stack is a great place to keep things like presentations, spreadsheets, and word processing files. You can drag files to the stack or save them to the stack from an application.
Documents
Stacks automatically display their contents in a fan ora
grid based on the number of items in the stack. You can also view the stack as a list. If you prefer one style over the other, you can set the stackto always open in that style. Stacks intelligently show the most relevant items first, or you can set the sort order so that the items you care about most always appear at the top of the stack. To customize a stack, position the pointer over the stack icon and hold down the mouse button until a menu appears. Choose the settings you want from the menu. To remove a file from a stack, just open the stack and drag the item out to where you want it. To delete a file, move it to the Trash. In fact, when youre done reading this document, feel free to throw it out.