Alfred app vs launchbar
"Bug fixes to latest - svn/branches/B5X B56a7 (3825)". ^ Lu, Mat (), Quicksilver goes Open Source, retrieved.
#Alfred app vs launchbar code#
^ jnjLu, Mat (), google code project blacktree-alchemy - "Initial import to GC", retrieved.^ a b c "Quicksilver User's Guide - Quicksilver Wiki".^ "Hack Attack: A beginner's guide to Quicksilver".
#Alfred app vs launchbar mac#
"Why Quicksilver is still the greatest Mac app of all time".
#Alfred app vs launchbar install#
Quicksilver has a built-in plug-in architecture, allowing the user to choose and install plug-ins providing integration with a specific program, interface, or new feature. For instance, if a command opening the Documents folder is bound to the F7 key, this hotkey would trigger that action regardless of what application the user is currently in. Quicksilver allows users to define "triggers," which perform a specific command (direct object/action/indirect object combination) whenever a customizable keyboard shortcut is pressed. Quicksilver uses a priority system based on prior usage to "learn" the user's habits, ultimately requiring only a few letters for the most commonly selected objects. By applying incremental search as the user types, Quicksilver predicts the filename or action typed by the user and automatically selects the object. Quicksilver is a background application that runs while the operating system is running, maintaining a "catalog" of files and objects on the user's computer. Invoked with a keyboard shortcut, Quicksilver has three panes, into which the user can enter an object, an action, and an optional attribute-analogous to creating a sentence with a subject, verb, and object.