ONNECT is a connection-based PAIR MATCHING GAME with challenging levels. The best pair matching puzzle! Find the matching tiles, connect the pairs with up to three lines. Remove all tile pairs before the time is over. Become an expert level by level. Enjoy the collections of lovely animals, delicious sweets, nice shoes, yummy fruits, cool vehicles, interesting professions, exciting emojis.
Apple provides a digital version of that old standby, the sliding tile game. Tile Game is a Dashboard widget on your Mac, so you can display it at any time by pressing the correct function key (F4 or F12, depending on the keyboard your Mac uses).
If you’re using a trackpad, display Mission Control (by swiping upward with three fingers) and click the Dashboard thumbnail.
Check out the Tile Game widget on a Dashboard.
How To Change The Tile Game On Mac Catalina
If the Tile Game widget doesn’t appear on your Dashboard, click the Add button (bearing the plus-sign icon) at the lower left to display your available widgets. Click the Tile Game icon, and El Capitan adds it to your Dashboard.
Click the Tile Game window once to randomize the tiles and then click again to start playing. To move a tile to the free space, click the tile. The object of the game, of course, is to restore the image to its original pristine condition!
You can return to your applications and your El Capitan Desktop at any time by pressing the Esc key again or by pressing the Dashboard function key again.
How To Change The Tile Game On Mac Free
One nice thing about Dashboard game widgets is that most of them save the current game (or position) when you close the Dashboard. That way, you can easily resume the game after you . . . well, get real work done.
*Get a copy of Windows, install it on your Mac using Bootcamp, and viola, you will now have access to the Tile and Cascade functions by right-clicking in the toolbar*.
Seriously, Mac OS X is not Windows, and vice versa. +There is no Mac equivalent to the Windows 'Tile Windows' command.+
So, you can teach yourself to use an alternatives like Exposé. Alternatively, you can use ⌘-Tab to cycle between apps, similar to Alt-Tab in Windows. One difference there is that in Windows Alt-Tab cycles through all open windows of all apps (e.g. if you have three word docs open, Alt-Tab will cycle through them all), whereas ⌘-Tab on the Mac will cycle through apps, but not docs within apps (so, in the above example there's just Word, not 3 Word docs). On the Mac, ⌘-` (the key just above Tab) cycles through open windows within an application. Personally, I usually have several apps with several docs in each open at one time, and I find the combination of ⌘-Tab and ⌘-` quite efficient for moving through them.
Or follow my first (facetious) suggestion about installing Windows.
Hope this helps...
Mar 19, 2008 5:15 AM
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