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![]() ![]() This application will now appear as an option in BetterTouchTool’s left-hand menu make sure it’s selected in this menu, and then build your gesture as normal.Select the application where you want to use this gesture, and then click ‘Open.’.Find the little ‘+’ icon below BetterTouchTool’s left-hand menu and give it a click.To create a gesture that’s specific to an application: This gesture will start working immediately, so try tapping two fingers on your background – your Mac should respond by locking automatically and displaying the login screen. I’m going to select ‘System Actions > Lock screen.’ Open the ‘Predefined Action’ dropdown and choose the action that you want this gesture to trigger.I’m going to use ‘Two Finger Gestures > 2 Finger Tap.’ Open the ‘Please Select a Gesture’ dropdown, and choose a gesture from BetterTouchTool’s vast catalogue of supported gestures.Click ‘Add New Gesture,’ which appears towards the bottom of the window.Since we want our gesture to work across the entire macOS system, I’m going to select ‘Global.’ In the left-hand menu, decide whether you’re creating a system-wide or application-specific gesture.Select the ‘Trackpads’ tab along the top of the screen.For the purposes of this tutorial I’ll be showing you how to create a gesture that lets you lock your Mac’s screen by tapping on the trackpad, but once you know how to create one gesture, you can use the same process to create a wide range of different gestures. You can use BetterTouchTool to create custom gestures that trigger a wide range of actions across the macOS system and even within specific applications. Click ‘Continue trial,’ which takes you to the main BetterTouchTool interface.The BetterTouchTool window should now have updated click the new ‘Start using BTT’ button.Make sure ‘Accessibility’ is selected in the left-hand menu. ![]() If you see a little padlock icon in the window’s bottom-left corner, then click this padlock and enter your admin password.This takes you to the appropriate section of the ‘System Preferences’ menu. BetterTouchTool requires access to the Accessibility API, so when prompted give the ‘Open System Preferences…’ button a click.Once the file has downloaded, unzip it, and then launch the BetterTouchTool application.Head over to the BetterTouchTool website and download the latest version.BetterTouchTool does require a license (personal licenses are available from £4.00) but a free 45 day free trial is available, so you can try before you buy. Setup BetterTouchToolīetterTouchTool is a third party app that lets you create custom gestures for your Mac’s trackpad. You can also disable gestures by deselecting their accompanying checkbox, which is particularly useful if you keep triggering an action by accident. If an action doesn’t have an accompanying arrow icon, then this means it’s impossible to select a new gesture for this action. Note that the available gestures will vary between actions, and there’s a few actions that you cannot map to different gestures. This window contains all of macOS’ default gestures, split across three tabs: ‘Point & Click,’ ‘Scroll & Zoom’ and ‘More Gestures.’ You can define a different gesture for many of the actions that appear across these tabs, for example clicking the little arrow icon that appears next to the ‘Swipe between pages’ gesture will open a dropdown containing some alternative gestures: Select ‘System preferences > Trackpad.’.Click the ‘Apple’ logo in your Mac’s menu bar.Your Mac already supports a number of trackpad gestures, but if these gestures don’t quite work for you, then it’s possible to modify many of these default gestures: ![]()
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