![]() ![]() ![]() In general you can think of open as the command line equivalent of double-clicking a file or folder in Finder. Or you can use the keyboard short cut ⌘⌥W. To clean up, you can option-click any close button in a Finder window to close all Finder windows. You can also open multiple folders at once: $ open ~/Documents ~/Desktop ~/Downloads This can be used as a quick way to navigate to hidden directories. Trivially, it cannot merely open the current working directory, but any path: $ open ~/Library/Preferences However, the open command can do so much more. (You, dear wonderful reader, know this because you read my previous post on Terminal-Finder Interaction.) Will open the current working directory in a Finder window. Most Terminal users will know that $ open. You can learn more about using Terminal and the shell on macOS in my my book: “ macOS Terminal and Shell” - Thank you!
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