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When I first started using Macs, one of the things most confusing to me were the symbols that OS X uses on the menus to indicate the keyboard short cuts:

MathType for Mac. By Design Science Free to try. Developer's Description. By Design Science MathType for Macintosh is a powerful interactive equation editor. IMac10,1, Mac OS X (10.6.4) Posted on Jul 16, 2010 7:16 PM Reply I have this question too (43) I have this question too Me. How to Use Your Mac’s Function Keys You may wonder what those function keys running along the top of the keyboard do. These function keys are labeled F1 through F12/F19 (how many you have depends on your keyboard), along with an Escape key and an Eject key that looks like a triangle on top of a horizontal line. Future MathType: MathType Mac: MathFlow: MathPlayer: MathDaisy: Products MathType Windows: Equations Everywhere and Anywhere™ Work with math in 800+ applications and websites! MathType is a powerful interactive equation editor for Windows and Macintosh that lets you create mathematical notation for word processing, web pages, desktop. Mac Key Caps Pi is a typeface designed by Linotype Design Studio, and is available for Desktop, Web, DigitalAds, App, ePub, and Server. Try, buy and download these fonts now!

Activation

Eventually, I learned what these symbols meant

Symbolkey
Command/Apple
Option
Delete
Shift
^Control

The ⇧ is obvious and the ^ is the usual symbol for the control key; the ⌫ is almost as obvious as the first two. The ⌥ key is the hardest one to figure out until you look it up in a unicode chart and discover that its name is “OPTION KEY.” So that symbol makes sense once you learn its name.

The ⌘ wasn’t difficult at all because it’s printed right on the command key but when you look up its name you find “PLACE OF INTEREST.” Huh? What does that have to do with command or Apple or anything else? I just put it down to one of the mysteries of the universe until I saw this post by Andy Hertzfeld over at Folklore.org. In it, Hertzfeld explains how that symbol came to be chosen for the command key. It’s an amusing story and I won’t spoil it for you by giving it away—head over to Folklore to see for yourself.

The keys in this chapter define assorted functionality related to macOS bundles.

Key Summary

Table 1 contains an alphabetical listing of macOS–specific keys, the corresponding name for that key in the Xcode property list editor, and a high-level description of each key. Detailed information about each key is available in later sections.

Table 1 Summary of macOS keys

Key

Xcode name

Summary

APInstallerURL

“Installation directory base file URL”

A URL-based path to the files you want to install. See APInstallerURL for details.

APFiles

“Installation files”

An array of dictionaries describing the files or directories that can be installed. See APFiles for details.

ATSApplicationFontsPath

“Application fonts resource path”

The path to a single font file or directory of font files in the bundle’s Resources directory. See ATSApplicationFontsPath for details.

CSResourcesFileMapped

“Resources should be file-mapped”

If true, Core Services routines map the bundle’s resource files into memory instead of reading them. See CSResourcesFileMapped for details.

NSMainStoryboardFile

“Main storyboard file base name”

Specifies the name of the app’s storyboard resource file. See NSMainStoryboardFile for details.

QLSandboxUnsupported

None

Specifies that a Quick Look plug-in does not support sandboxing. See for details.

QuartzGLEnable

None

Specifies whether the app uses Quartz GL. See QuartzGLEnable for details.

APInstallerURL

APInstallerURL (String - macOS) identifies the base path to the files you want to install. You must specify this path using the form file://localhost/path/. All installed files must reside within this directory.

APFiles

APFiles (Array - macOS) specifies a file or directory you want to install. You specify this key as a dictionary, the contents of which contains information about the file or directory you want to install. To specify multiple items, nest the APFiles key inside itself to specify files inside of a directory. Table 2 lists the keys for specifying information about a single file or directory.

Table 2 Keys for APFiles dictionary

Key

Xcode name

Type

Description

APFileDescriptionKey

“Install file description text”

String

A short description of the item to display in the Finder’s Info window

APDisplayedAsContainer

“Display with folder icon”

String

If “Yes” the item is shown with a folder icon in the Info panel; otherwise, it is shown with a document icon

APFileDestinationPath

“File destination path”

String

Where to install the component as a path relative to the app bundle

APFileName

“Install file name”

String

The name of the file or directory

APFileSourcePath

“Install file source path”

String

The path to the component in the app package relative to the APInstallerURL path.

APInstallAction

“File install action”

String

The action to take with the component: “Copy” or “Open”

ATSApplicationFontsPath

ATSApplicationFontsPath (String - macOS) identifies the location of a font file or directory of fonts in the bundle’s Resources directory. If present, macOS activates the fonts at the specified path for use by the bundled app. The fonts are activated only for the bundled app and not for the system as a whole. The path itself should be specified as a relative directory of the bundle’s Resources directory. For example, if a directory of fonts was at the path /Applications/MyApp.app/Contents/Resources/Stuff/MyFonts/, you should specify the string Stuff/MyFonts/ for the value of this key.

CSResourcesFileMapped

CSResourcesFileMapped (Boolean - macOS) specifies whether to map this app’s resource files into memory. Otherwise, they are read into memory normally. File mapping can improve performance in situations where you are frequently accessing a small number of resources. However, resources are mapped into memory read-only and cannot be modified.

NSMainStoryboardFile

NSMainStoryboardFile (String - macOS) contains a string with the name of the app’s main storyboard file (minus the .storyboard filename extension). A storyboard file is an Interface Builder archive containing the app’s view controllers, the connections between those view controllers and their immediate views, and the segues between view controllers. When this key is present, the main storyboard file is loaded automatically at launch time and its initial view controller is installed in the app’s window.

This key is mutually exclusive with the NSMainNibFile key. You should include one of these keys in your Info.plist file but not both. This key is supported in macOS 10.10 and later.

Macbook

QLSandboxUnsupported

QLSandboxUnsupported (Boolean - macOS) allows a Quick Look plug-in to opt out of sandboxing. A code-signed Quick Look plug-in—which includes all plug-ins that are bundled in apps available in the Mac App Store—is sandboxed by default. Use this key to temporarily disable sandboxing while you update your plug-in to be compatible with it.

QuartzGLEnable

QuartzGLEnable (Boolean - macOS) specifies whether this app uses Quartz GL.

Value

Description

true

Turn on Quartz GL for the app’s windows. (This works only when the computer has at least 1 GB of RAM).

false

Disable Quartz GL. Quartz GL will not be available, even after using [<NSWindow> setPreferredBackingLocation:].

Quartz GL is not supported on computers with more than one video card installed.

To turn on Quartz QL for testing use the Quartz Debug app, located in <Xcode>/Applications.

This key is available in macOS 10.5 and later.


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