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How to do a hashtag on a Mac

This post, originally called “How to do a Hashtag on a Mac… or anything else for that matter”, has been updated due to the help of a few readers who pointed out my mistake: not everyone who uses a Mac uses a US or Canadian keyboard and, outside North America, the keyboard mapping between PC and Mac is occasionally quite different. I have adjusted the article to take this into account but only for Mac users this time.

2755v30 max 250x250 How to do a hashtag on a MacI make a habit of checking in to Twitter and doing a search for people who have Mac questions. By far the number one question is “How do you do a print screen on a Mac?” but a close second is “How do you do a hashtag on a Mac?”

The question perplexes me because you do a hashtag on a Mac the same way you do a hashtag on any other platform. The situation gets even more confusing when I see some people answering the question with a link to a blog post telling people that the # symbol was hiding behind Alt-3 (no self-respecting Mac person recognizes any key on a Mac keyboard by the name “Alt” so that’s a dead giveaway that you’re being conned—you get £ when you type Alt-3).

Okay, so, to actually do a hashtag… on a Mac… or anything else… hold down the Shift key and type a 3 to get the # symbol and then, without any spaces, type your tag word(s). If your tag contains more than one word, omit the spaces between the words—we want one unbroken string of characters attached to that #.

That’s it. It’s not hard at all. And, it’s not platform-specific at all.

To do a hashtag, you must first figure out how to type the # symbol. On a US or Canadian keyboard, that is dead easy… hold down the Shift key and type the number 3 on the main keyboard. Where it gets dicey is on other keyboard mappings in countries and cultures where the # symbol is not used as often and, thus, is hidden to allow more useful symbols to be easier to type. Here’s what you do if you find yourself in that situation:

  • First open your System Preferences and go under Hardware and choose Keyboard
  • Once there make sure “Show Keyboard & Character Viewer” is checked.

Screen shot 2011 07 17 at 5.34.25 PM 318x287 How to do a hashtag on a Mac

    • You will now see a squarish box with a * in it near the clock in the menu bar—that’s the Keyboard & Character Viewer

Screen shot 2011 07 17 at 5.18.27 PM How to do a hashtag on a Mac

  • Go up to the menu at the Keyboard & Character Viewer and pull down to choose “Show Keyboard Viewer
    • The Keyboard Viewer will open and show you the mapping of the keyboard based on the keyboard map you have chosen in the Language & Text preferences in your System Preferences.
  • Here’s where we experiment and observe:
    • if you look at the Keyboard Viewer, it shows you the keys of your keyboard and what will be typed if you press on any of the keys.
    • if you hold down a modifier key like Shift, Option or Shift + Option together, they characters on the keys will change accordingly showing what character will be typed when you press that key with the specific modifier key(s) you are holding down
    • look over the keys as you try Shift, Option and Shift + Option until you find out which key and which modifier key must be combined to type the # symbol.

keyboard How to do a hashtag on a Mac

Once you know which key and which modifier key must be combined to type the # symbol, you can close the Keyboard Viewer and go back to the Keyboard preferences and uncheck “Show Keyboard & Character Viewer”. It’s a bit of convoluted process, but it’s not hard and once you learn how to do this you’ll be able to find any character you need to type that is mapped to your particular keyboard.

The hard part is more the question “What is a hashtag?” or “Why would want to use one?”

The use of hashtags on Twitter is a great way to quickly join your post to a greater conversational subject. You’ll often see charitable causes using slogany hashtags to raise awareness of their message. If you see a hashtag, you can click on it and you’ll be taken to a search result showing all the recent posts that use that hashtag.

Hashtags are also used one Twitter to associate posts with ongoing “games” or Twitter memes like #replaceawordinafamousquotewithduck where participants did just that, they took a famous phrase and replaced a word in it with the word duck to humorous effect. Clicking on the hashtag in one of these posts brought up all of the crazy submissions on one page.

Very handy.

I hope you found this post handy too. In fact, if you have a Mac question and would like to test out your hashtagging skills, post a question to Twitter with the hashtag #askrickmacmerc and I’ll do my best to answer it and I may even use it in a post like this one…you could also post a comment below.

 How to do a hashtag on a Mac

Handle Your Home Folder

By: Jon Gales

This is the first of a weekly series on being a power user. Since every
week you’ll see a new article on Monday, it’s smartly called “Power User
Monday”. If you have any tips, questions or comments please shoot them
my way.

Upon switching to OS X, most 9 afficianodos wanted to make X behave like 9.
That’s when the little hacks to get the trash can to be on the desktop, Apple

menu’s to come back, and the like all came into power. These things were really
popular because no one really knew how to use OS X. Times have changed. To
be a power user in OS X you gotta maximize what’s given. Here’s how to get
the best out of the Home Folder:

  1. Don’t store any personal data outside your Home folder. There’s only one
    exception… If you have a seperate hard drive or partition that certain
    types of file (media?) stay on. In this case just make sure you remember
    to back up that drive as well. If everything is in your home folder, Backup
    (from .Mac) or any other backup tool makes it easy to have all your data.
    A nice thing about X is that it even stores your prefs in the home folder
    (Library).

  2. Don’t have folders on your Desktop, have aliases that link to folders in
    your Home Folder. Folders on the Desktop are a waste of time. It may sound
    odd at first, but the advantage is obvious on a second look. Desktop’s get
    cluttered (just like your real desk
    can get stacked up and become confusing). I keep an alias of my Documents
    Folder on my Desktop, as well as another alias for whatever I’m
    working
    on (PowerUser Monday for instance). If you still aren’t convinced… When
    you backup your Documents Folder, all of your docs go with it. Otherwise,
    you’d have to look through tons of folders and sub-folders to get the same
    backup. Any organization you can add to your computing will speed up your
    work time, which is great unless
    you get paid by the hour icon smile Handle Your Home Folder .

  3. Put the Home Folder (and any common sub-folders) you use into the Dock.
    That way with one click you can access anything on your Home folder from
    any
    application. Update: Had some people asking how this helps… Click and hold, control click, or (if you have a 2 button mouse) right click on the icon in the Dock and see the folder displayed as a menu. I can’t tell you how much this speeds up things, and I see very
    few people doing it. I have the Home Folder, Documents and Desktop folders
    in my dock (as well as the Applications Folder).

The Home folder is the hub of data for OS X. Make it your friend. Check back
next Monday!

Screw CommandsóStart Gesturing

By: Jon Gales

Key-commands are great. I love ‘em. Why shall we dump them? Meet Cocoa
Gestures
.
It’s a freeware application that lets you use the movement of your mouse as
a command. I know that sounds insanely hard but it’s not. There are only a
few movements you need to know:

  1. Up
  2. Down
  3. Left
  4. Right

Yep, it’s just the X/Y deal that you did in Algebra (that’s all mice can do
if you had not realized by now). What Cocoa Gestures does is take combinations
of
said
movements
and
remembers them
specific
to
applications.
Example:

Left, Down, Right with your mouse looks like this on your screen:

cocoagesturesgraph Screw CommandsóStart Gesturing

You don’t have to have rigid lines and sharp cornersórough works. It’s pretty
easy to set each gesture up, you just go to the application menu, select Cocoa
Gestures and click the add button. After you input the actual mouse movement
it shows you what it saw in the form of single letters (u,d,l and r). There
are a lot of combinations of the 4 movements and since they are application
specific
you won’t have to worry about running out.

As with everything, there are a few problems. The major one with this app
is that it only works with Cocoa apps. You’ll notice that a lot of your apps
happen to be Carbon…
Even
the
Finder
isn’t
Cocoaóit
was written in Power Plant (according to my programmer friends). How do you
tell if it’s a Cocoa app? Go to the Application menu (next to the Apple Menu)
and see if Cocoa Gestures is there. If not, you’ll have to keep up the key
commands.

Also, if you don’t have a mouse that has two buttons or a scroll wheel then
part of the usefulness of this application is lost. For instance, when I’m
browsing pages in Camino I can just hit the scroll wheel, drag to the left
and view the tab to the left of the page I’m viewing. Quite handy and very
geek chic. On the other hand, if I was using an Apple mouse I would have to
hit a key on the keyboard to tell Cocoa Gestures to start watching the mouse.
If you’re a true power user, you’ll have a two button mouse any way… This
shouldn’t be a problem.

If you use Cocoa Gestures and have some killer tips for everyone, please send
them in
. If they really kick butt, I’ll post them and give you credit (if you
want it).