title | subtitle | pubDate | platforms | appStoreId | olderMacOSVersions | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Folder Peek |
Put folders in your menu bar |
2022-04-05 |
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1615988943 |
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Folder Peek lets you put one or more folders in the menu bar.
Make sure you read the below tips and FAQ.
- Click a file or folder in the menu to open it. Folders open in Finder.
- Click a file while pressing the Option key to show it in Finder.
- Click the folder title (the top menu item) to open the folder.
- You can drag and drop the file thumbnail in the file submenu. Press the Option key while dragging to copy instead of moving.
- Just start typing when the menu is open to search for a file or folder.
- Press the Option when viewing the file details to copy the path or image/video dimensions.
- You can use the Shortcuts support to show/hide certain folders depending on what project you are working on.
- If you have the menu bar item folders next to each other and you have one folder open, you can press Control+Tab or Shift+Control+Tab to switch between them.
- Press the Option key while the menu is open to show the
…
menu item at the top if it normally is at the bottom. - Right-click or Option-click the menu bar item to open the folder.
- Press the Shift key while viewing a subfolder to reveal more actions. For example, sort order settings.
You can use Folder Peek to access links too. Drag and drop the URL from the Safari address bar into a folder. You will end up with a file with a .webloc
extension. When you click that file in Folder Peek, it will open in your browser.
You could add the “Desktop” folder to Folder Peek and then hide the desktop icons for a cleaner look.
macOS hides menu bar apps when there is no space left in the menu bar. This is a common problem on MacBooks with a notch. Try quitting some other menu bar apps to free up space. If this does not solve it, try quitting Bartender if you have it installed.
When the menu bar has no space left, macOS hides overflowing items. Try quitting some menu bar apps.
This is a macOS bug on non-Retina displays. There is unfortunately not much I can do about this.
You can create a folder that contains aliases to the files and folders you want to be included in the menu.
Create a folder to put aliases in and add that folder to the app. Make aliases for the files and folders you want in the menu and move the aliases into the folder you just made.
An alias is a shortcut to an app, file, or folder that you can keep anywhere on your Mac. Right-click an item in Finder and select “Make Alias” to make one.
Just add the “Applications” folder to the app. If you want to show only specific apps, follow the first FAQ.
See the “Can I show specific files and folders from various places?” answer.
You can create a shortcut in the Shortcuts app using the “Set Folder Visibility” action where you show only certain folders. For example, you could make a shortcut named “Start Work” which hides your personal folders in the menu bar and shows folders for your work projects. You could even use the Shortery app to trigger this shortcut at a certain time or any other condition.
You can drag & drop the file preview/thumbnail in the file submenu.
Press the Option key while dragging to copy instead of moving.
It would have been nicer if you could drag & drop directly from the top-level list of files and folders, but this is not possible because of limitations with the system menu.
Press the Option key while viewing a file to reveal a “Copy Path” button.
Press the Option key while viewing an image or video to reveal a “Copy Dimensions” button.
Press the Shift key while viewing a subfolder to reveal more actions, including a sort order setting.
Make a folder to hold the screenshots and add the folder to the app. Open the Screenshot app, click “Options”, then “Other Location”, and choose the folder you just made. In Folder Peek, open the folder config, change the sort order to “Date Created”, and set “Max Items” to something like 20.
You may also want to disable the screenshot preview so the screenshot shows up in the screenshot folder right away.
How can I add a Smart Folder? {#smart-folder}
A Smart Folder is a special feature in Finder that allows you to create a virtual folder based on specific search criteria. The files within the Smart Folder are not physically stored in one location, but rather are located in different areas of your computer. Unfortunately, it is not possible to add a Smart Folder to Folder Peek as the functionality cannot be replicated.
Click the menu bar item, go to the first menu bar item (which is named after your folder), go to its submenu, and then select “Remove Folder”.
No, that is unfortunately not possible. Folder Peek is built as a system menu, and a menu cannot be kept open if it's not focused. Instead, first, navigate to the nested folder, click to open it in Finder, and then drag & drop the file into the Finder window.
Apps define the types they support and Folder Peek just fetches a list of apps that support opening folders. However, many apps forget to declare support for folders even though they can open them. I would encourage reporting this to the developers of the app you want to open (example report). In the meantime, I'm happy to manually add the app to the list if you contact me, but you are expected to also have reported the issue to the app's developers.
Folder Peek opens the default app that handles folders, which is Finder by default.
- Path Finder: Enable the “Set as the default file browser” preference in Path Finder.
- ForkLift: Follow this guide.
For other apps, follow this guide, but replace com.binarynights.ForkLift-3
with the bundle identifier of the app you want.
How is this better than having folders in the Dock? {#dock-folders}
- Slightly faster access, since most users have the Dock automatically hidden and the menu bar always shown.
- File preview.
- Copy and share a file.
- View and copy image/video dimensions.
- Open a file or folder in a specific app.
- Keep folders on top.
- Sort by when the file was last accessed.
- Show the menu using a custom global keyboard shortcut.
- Limit the number of items shown in the menu.
- Shortcuts support.
How is this better than XMenu? {#xmenu}
- You can choose any folder and as many as you want, not just a few predefined ones and a single custom folder.
- Each folder can be individually customized.
- Sandboxed app (more secure).
- Custom menu bar icon.
- File preview.
- Copy, share, and drag & drop a file.
- View and copy image/video dimensions.
- Open a file or folder in a specific app.
- Sort files by date created, date modified, date accessed, date added, and kind.
- Show the menu using a custom global keyboard shortcut.
- Limit the number of items shown in the menu.
- Shortcuts support.
I just enjoy making Mac apps. Consider leaving a nice review on the App Store.
Go here and click “Version History”.
I don't have any immediate plans to localize the app.
- 1.6.1 for macOS 12+
A special version for users that cannot access the App Store. It won't receive automatic updates. I will update it here once a year.
Download (1.8.2)
Requires macOS 13 or later