Getting Help in OS X

It’s a good thing you’ve got a book about OS X in your hands, because the only manual you get with it is the Help menu, a browser-like program that reads a set of help files that reside in your System→Library folder.

Tip

In fact, you may not even be that lucky. The general-information help page about each topic is on your Mac, but thousands of the more technical pages reside online and require an Internet connection to read.

You’re expected to find the topic you want in one of these three ways:

The Help Center (top) likes to help with big-ticket computer tasks like joining a network, setting up your email program, or browsing the web. Once you perform a search for some topic (middle), you get a details page (bottom) that offers a list of finely grained step-by-steps.The Help windows try to be helpful by floating stubbornly in front of all your other windows. That, actually, can be frustrating, since you can’t see the software you’re reading about. The best solution is to make the window narrow and park it at the edge of your screen.

Figure 1-30. The Help Center (top) likes to help with big-ticket computer tasks like joining a network, setting up your email program, or browsing the web. Once you perform a search for some topic (middle), you get a details page (bottom) that offers a list of finely grained step-by-steps. The Help windows try to be helpful by floating stubbornly in front of all your other windows. That, actually, can be frustrating, since you can’t see the software you’re reading about. The best solution is to make the window narrow and park it at the edge of your screen.

Note

Actually, there’s one more place where Help crops up: in System Preferences dialog boxes. Click the circled question-mark button () in the lower-right corner of most System Preferences panels to open a help page that identifies each control.