- Web design apps for mac upgrade#
- Web design apps for mac pro#
- Web design apps for mac Offline#
- Web design apps for mac plus#
Sip (free) is a great quick color-picker with the ability to automatically copy a color's HEX, RGB, or many other codes to the clipboard.
Web design apps for mac plus#
XtraFinder (free) adds Chrome-style tabs to Finder plus a whole bunch of other useful features. Nice alternative to Microsoft Office and it's free with new computers.Ĭheck out Airmail ($1.99) or Mailbox (free, beta key required) as nice mail clients. Gives your display a warm color gradually as nighttime arrives, great for late-night coding.Īssuming you bought a new Mac, check if you've got iWork (Pages, Keynote, and Numbers). Incredibly useful if you have a lot in your menu bar like me.Ĭross-platform but worth noting is f.lux (free). You can either completely hide them or add them to the Bartender bar, which appears as a menu bar item itself. Works great in combination with Codekit ($29), especially if you use CSS Pre-processors.Ĭheck out Pixelmator ($29.99) as a great Photoshop alternative.īartender ($15) is an app that lets you organize your menu bar apps. I constantly use its Mount as Disk feature which allows you to access servers using Finder. If you're interested you may want to get it now while it's $75, my guess is it will go back up to $99 when 2.5 releases.Īlso from Panic is Transmit ($34), their FTP solution.
Web design apps for mac upgrade#
Panic is working on a major upgrade that should be coming out in the next month or two. Alfred also used to be a lot better at file searching (not sure if it still is) and has functionality like quickly running a terminal command, and what I find most helpful. There are loads more examples of great workflows out there, and they add some really cool / intuitive functionality at the press of a hotkey combination. I've saved my log in details so I can quickly and easily do a ton of different things. The github workflow to jump straight to a repo, search, etc.Stackoverflow workflow, allows me to 'st $my_problem' and again, it removes one step that saves so a little time which adds up so quickly.The caniuse workflow, simply 'caniuse $new_feature' and I'm there in a blink.The dash workflow allows me to type 'php $function_name' and I'll be able to hit the docs for it almost as fast as I've decided I want to see it.
Taking 4 I use pretty frequently as an example: In my experience Alfred's strength is found in workflows. Opening programs is likely everybody's most common use of either programs and both do it fine.
That said, a lot of what I use Alfred for can definitely be accomplished using Spotlight. I know Apple's pull a lot of emphasis on improving Spotlight for Yosemite so I'll be interested to see what that turns out. I've actually got limited experience with spotlight because I've almost always used Alfred.