![]() The newly-added Tweakable flag ~/.totalfinder-alwaysenablenewlabellookupmethods enables the new Coloured Labels lookup logic on macOS 12 Monterey and below, which normally use a different label colour lookup method that no longer works as of macOS 13 Ventura.Certain behaviour flags that were used during the testing of the new Coloured Labels logic are now controllable via TotalFinder's power-user-oriented "Tweakables" feature, which you can use by creating specific files in your home directory (~, or $) using the command-line utility touch.Various other internal refactors and improvements were made to TotalFinder as a whole.Made many improvements to the TotalFinder diagnostics utility (diagnose-totalfinder.sh) that improve the usefulness of its output.Major internal refactors were made to the Coloured Labels feature, resulting in better optimisation of label colour lookup operations.Fixed a rendering issue where the TotalFinder icon in the Finder preferences on macOS 11 Big Sur and newer was unable to be tinted by the user's macOS UI tint colour when selected. ![]() Fixed a rendering issue where the TotalFinder icon in the Finder preferences on macOS 11 Big Sur and newer would render with aliasing artifacts, especially on non-Retina/HiDPI displays where the issue was very severe.Fixed an issue where the new Coloured Labels logic would use the oldest label colour found on an item with multiple labels, instead of the newest.Fixed an issue where the new Coloured Labels logic would be unable to obtain the label colour of certain items that have coloured label information stored in a slightly different way than what was thought to be possible during testing.(※ Please note that this issue has nothing to do with the UEFI bootloader named OpenCore - TotalFinder has never had any known compatibility issues with the OpenCore UEFI bootloader. Fixed a code injection issue where TotalFinder would fail to successfully inject on certain legacy / unsupported systems that were patched using OpenCore Legacy Patcher / OCLP.It’s not yet a full replacement of TotalFinder but it already has some of its essential features without compromising the System Integrity Protection (SIP) which, by the way, rang the death knell for TotalFinder. Then with the announced demise of TotalFinder on January 10, 2021, I started porting some of its features to FinderFix. What’s more, it relies on some very slow AppleScript calls to solve the task at hand.Īdditionally with M1 Apple silicon chips “on my door steps”, I felt the urge to write an alternative in pure modern and fast Swift in an M1 Universal Binary 2. It was showing its age with a 32-bit PowerPC universal binary and its use of quite a lot of private APIs. However, what worried me about it was that there had been no new releases since 2016. It was rudimentary, had its own warts, like having to hide it on each computer restart, but as far as resizing and setting Finder’s position was involved it just worked. The only working solution until now was FinderMinder. How do I make this thing stay the way I want it to? I don’t mind playing around with system stuff or running scripts - so long as I only have to do it once only. ![]() It’s useless and very tedious and it really aggravates me. It just reverts back to its microscopic size the next time I open it. ![]() Why doesn’t Finder remember the damn window size and location? I keep reading crap about holding down Option key while dragging but that doesn’t work. If you look for an answer to “How do I get Finder to remember its size and position?” on the web, you find literally dozens of non-working answers. If after all those years of using your Mac you are still fighting with Finder to get it to behave as you wish, look no further, FinderFix will get it to open every new window in the exact same position and size you want it to. Give extra powers to your Finder windows! ![]()
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