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How to work in multiple Spaces in macOS Sierra

It’s easy for your Mac’s desktop to become cluttered, just as a physical desktop can. If this happens, you can create additional desktops, called spaces, to organize the windows. When you work in a space, you see only the windows that are in that space.

Use the Mission Control app to show the Spaces bar. This is where thumbnails represent your spaces and any apps you’re using in full screen or Split View. You can make your spaces unique by assigning a different desktop picture to each one. Just assign System Preferences to all desktops, then change the desktop picture in each space.

To create a space, open Mission Control, then click the Add button in the Spaces bar. You can create up to 16 spaces. When you’re done, click a space in the Spaces bar or a window in Mission Control.

To move between Spaces, do one of the following:

  • On a trackpad: swipe left or right with three or four fingers.
  • On a Magic Mouse, swipe with two fingers. Press the Control key and the Right or Left arrow key. 
  • Enter Mission Control, move the pointer to the top edge of the screen to show the Spaces bar, then click a space.
  • To move an app window from one space to another, do one of the following:
  • Drag the window to the edge of the screen. After a moment, the window moves to the next space.
  • Place the pointer over the window’s title bar. Press and hold the trackpad or mouse, then press the Control key and the Right or Left arrow key.
  • From the space that has the window you want to move, enter Mission Control. Then drag the window up to the space you want to use.

If you drag the window onto a full screen app in the Spaces bar, you can use the apps in Split View.

If you assign an app (or System Preferences) to a specific space, the app will always open in that space. Press and hold an app’s icon in the Dock. (You may need to first open the app to see its icon in the Dock.) From the shortcut menu that appears, choose Options, then one of the following:

  • All Desktops: The app opens in every space.
  • This Desktop: The app opens only in the current space. If you use the app full screen, it appears in its own space.
  • Desktop on Display [number]: The app opens in the current space on a specific display (if more than one display is available).
  • None: The app opens in whichever space you’re using at the time.

By default, when you switch to an app, the desktop automatically switches to a space that has open windows for the app. To change this setting, choose Apple menu > System Preferences, then click Mission Control.

To delete a space, open Mission Control, then move the pointer to the top edge of the screen to show the Spaces bar. Place the pointer over the space you want to delete, then click the Delete button that appears. If the space contains open windows, they’re moved to another space.

You can quickly stop using an app in full screen or Split View by moving the pointer over the thumbnail in the Space bar, then clicking the Exit button that appears.

Dennis Sellers
the authorDennis Sellers
Dennis Sellers is the editor/publisher of Apple World Today. He’s been an “Apple journalist” since 1995 (starting with the first big Apple news site, MacCentral). He loves to read, run, play sports, and watch movies.