Difference between revisions of "Macintosh"

From Freeplane - free mind mapping and knowledge management software
(Created page with '== Freeplane on Mac OS X == Here are some tips for Macintosh users who'd like to test Freeplane. At first this information will be more useful for advanced users. As this page ...')
 
Line 7: Line 7:
 
=== Download  ===
 
=== Download  ===
  
Find the latest alpha version at [http://sourceforge.net/projects/freeplane/files/ SourceForge] by scrolling down toward the bottom of the page. Use the Date column to help identify the most recent release. Freeplane is currently available as a .zip file rather than a Mac-style .dmg file, so look under the Platform column for the latest version listed for "linux, mac, bsd, solaris, others." As of this writing the current version is [http://sourceforge.net/projects/freeplane/files/freeplane%20testing/1.0.30%20alpha/freeplane_bin-1.0.30.zip/download freeplane_bin-1.0.30.zip] <br>  
+
Find the latest alpha version at [http://sourceforge.net/projects/freeplane/files/ SourceForge] by scrolling down toward the bottom of the page. Use the Date column to help identify the most recent release. Freeplane is currently available as a .zip file rather than a Mac-style .dmg file, so look under the Platform column for the latest version listed for "linux, mac, bsd, solaris, others." As of this writing the current version is freeplane_bin-1.0.30.zip <br>  
  
 
Download the .zip file to your Desktop or Download folder, or wherever you normally store downloaded files.  
 
Download the .zip file to your Desktop or Download folder, or wherever you normally store downloaded files.  

Revision as of 10:13, 27 September 2009

Freeplane on Mac OS X

Here are some tips for Macintosh users who'd like to test Freeplane. At first this information will be more useful for advanced users. As this page develops, it should be ready for "the rest of us."

The steps below have been tested under Mac OS X 10.4 "Tiger," and will need to be adapted for 10.5 "Leopard" and 10.6 "Snow Leopard."

Download

Find the latest alpha version at SourceForge by scrolling down toward the bottom of the page. Use the Date column to help identify the most recent release. Freeplane is currently available as a .zip file rather than a Mac-style .dmg file, so look under the Platform column for the latest version listed for "linux, mac, bsd, solaris, others." As of this writing the current version is freeplane_bin-1.0.30.zip

Download the .zip file to your Desktop or Download folder, or wherever you normally store downloaded files.

Install

When the download is finished, double-click it to "unzip" the compressed file. This will create a new folder with a name such as "freeplane-1.0.30" (depending on the version number). Move this folder into your Applications folder. You may now delete the downloaded .zip file.

Run

Start the Freeplane application from a Terminal window. To open Terminal, start from Finder, pull down the Go menu, choose Utilities, find the Terminal icon and double-click it.

Enter the following two lines into the Terminal window, one line at a time, pressing the Return key at the end of each line (you may Copy these lines from this web page and Paste them into the Terminal window):

  cd /Applications/freeplane-1.0.30/

  ./freeplane.sh

After a short delay you should see Freeplane's logo appear on a "splash screen." Otherwise, if you've downloaded a Freeplane version other than 1.0.30, you'll ned to change the first line entered into Terminal  to match your version number.

This start-up process can be made much simpler, using methods such as a "bash script," AppleScript, or Platypus. More details soon...

Usage

Freeplane menus appear at the top of its own window, rather than at the top of the Desktop like normal Mac programs. This makes Freeplane usage identical under Windows, Linux, and Mac OS X.

Keyboard shortcuts also default to Windows and Linux conventions, generally using the "control" key instead of the Apple (Command or cloverleaf) key. It's easy to change most keyboard shortcuts, though, by holding down the "control" key while clicking the corresponding menu item. This brings up a dialog in which you can enter whatever key combination you like.

Most Mac users will need to change the shortcut for inserting a child node. Mac keyboards generally lack an "Insert" key, so you'll want to assign another key (such as "tab") for this, under the Insert menu.

Quit

To exit Freeplane, pull down its File menu and choose Exit. This should return you to the Terminal window, which you can quit in the normal way.