Alt-Tab

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Template:Short description Template:Refimprove

Template:Key press is the common name for a keyboard shortcut that has been in Microsoft Windows since Windows 1.0 (1985). This shortcut switches between application-level windows without using the mouse; hence it was named Task Switcher (Flip in Windows Vista).

Template:Key press orders windows by most recently used, thus repeated Template:Key press keystrokes will switch between the two most recent tasks. It can also be used alternate between a full-size window and the desktop. The window environment maintains a Z-order list of top-level windows (tasks) with the most recently used tasks at the front and the desktop at the bottom, so the most recently used tasks can be switched to the most quickly.

The Template:Key press keyboard combination has also been incorporated in other operating systems and desktop environments such as KDE, Xfce, and GNOME. iOS and macOS have similar functionality by pressing Template:Key press but that switches applications rather than windows.

Behavior

The use of the modifier key Template:Key press in using Template:Key press differs from typical modifier key use in the following ways:

There are many subtleties to the behavior of Template:Key press, and they have remained mostly unchanged over the years.

The behavior follows these rules:

  • If there is more than one window, the task list appears as soon as Template:Key press is pressed while Template:Key press is being held down.
  • The task list remains open until Template:Key press is released.
  • Template:Key press moves the cursor forward in the list; Template:Key press moves it backward.
  • Template:Key press or Template:Key press will autorepeat if held down (useful if there are many windows).
  • With the initial press of Template:Key press or Template:Key press, the selection cursor starts on the window immediately following or immediately preceding the active one.
  • If there are no topmost windows above the active window, an initial Template:Key press wraps the cursor around to the end of the list.
  • Using the mouse to click on a task icon in the task window switches to that task (does not work on Windows XP and earlier).
  • Pressing Template:Keypress or clicking the mouse outside of the task window while Template:Keypress is still down cancels the switch.
  • The windows are listed by their Z-order.
  • Any windows that are "always on top" are placed at the front of the Z-order sequence, followed by the current window and the windows underneath it.
  • The desktop is given a window just like it was a top-level window. This no longer works on Windows 10.
  • Switching to a window moves it to the front of the Z-order, with the exception that "always on top" windows remain topmost and at the front of the list.
  • When the Template:Key press task switcher window is not active, Template:Keypress places the active window at the bottom of the Z-order. In Windows 8 the behavior has changed: the window will be moved one level down the Z-order instead of going to the end.
  • Template:Keypress is equivalent to one Template:Key press except that minimized windows are selected without being restored.
  • Minimizing a window also sends it to the back of the Z-order in the same way as Template:Key press.

The rules have the following consequences:

When the task list is initially activated by pressing Template:Key press, the list is populated in this order:

  • Any 'always-on-top' top-level windows according to Z-order, front-to-back.
  • All ordinary top-level windows according to Z-order, front-to-back.

The task list does not change order while it is open, but the order of tasks can change between invocations of the task list.

Windows Vista changed the default behavior[1] (under most default installations) with its Flip interface. The six most recently used items in the Flip order work as described, then remaining windows are ordered alphabetically by application path (and optionally grouped, depending on the 'group similar taskbar buttons' setting which is enabled by default).

Windows 10 removed the desktop from the task list.

Illustrative examples

Windows may be divided into two categories, 'always-on-top' and ordinary. When a task is switched to, it is moved to the head of its category. For the following example, suppose there are no 'always-on-top' windows. Let A be the current window title. Hold down Alt and press and release Tab once, leaving Alt pressed. The window list comes up. A is guaranteed to be first in the list. Suppose the complete list is A W Z E U B C. The selection cursor will initially be on W. Suppose we want to switch to window U. Without releasing Alt, press Tab three more times and then release Alt. Then hold down Alt and press-release Tab once leaving Alt down. The window list will now show U A W Z E B C. Then Tab over to E and release Alt, selecting window E. Press and hold down Alt and press-release Tab once leaving Alt down. The window list will now show E U A W Z B C. Note that the windows switched to with Template:Key press (E, U, A) are in order of how recently they were switched to. Now Tab over to A and release Alt. Press and hold down Alt and press-release Tab leaving Alt down. The window list will show A E U W Z B C. The effect of this most-recently used behavior is that to return to the most recent task, Tab is pressed once, for the second most recent task Tab is pressed twice, and so on for all tasks. The priority of a window in terms of Template:Key press accessibility is how recently it was used. If A is now minimized, the list will become E U W Z B C A, and if Z is minimized the list becomes E U W B C A Z. Thus minimizing a window mimics the effect of not using it for a long time.

The commonplace alternation between the 2 most recent tasks (using a fast Template:Key press with all keys released immediately) is precisely a special case of the above behavior. Suppose the windows are A B C and we want to alternate between A and B. Hold Alt while pressing and releasing Tab; continue holding Alt. The list will show A B C and the cursor will initially be over B. When Alt is released B will be selected, Tab having been pressed a total of 1 time, and zero attention to the task selection cursor having been necessary. Again, press and release Tab while holding Alt. The list will show B A C and the cursor will initially be over A. When Alt is released we have switched back to A. Displaying the list again, the order has returned to A B C and this sequence can recur. On close inspection, in the course of typing Template:Key press and releasing both keys quickly, the task list window can be observed to flicker for a split second, so . If the user has been switching among 3 applications and wants to dispense with one of them by minimizing, one of the remaining ones will be on top immediately after minimizing, and ordinarily Template:Key press will alternate between the 2 remaining windows. If a program fails to move to the end of the list when minimized, pressing Template:Key press once will return to the minimized program. Failures such as this can result in a frenzied reordering of the Template:Key press list by means of several Template:Key press-Template:Key press-Template:Key press... sequences to compensate for the program misbehavior. The algorithm for this reshuffling is intuitive after using for a long time. If the user attempts to switch to an application using Template:Key press but the application fails to update its place in the z-order (for example, if its window procedure is hung), then the next time Template:Key press is invoked, the task selection cursor may initially point unexpectedly far into the list of icons, just past the application in question, which will not have been moved to the head of the list.

Applications have some say in where they are located in the Template:Key press order. The list of windows is altered by the creation and destruction of windows, programmatic hiding, showing, raising, and lowering of windows, and alterations to the window z-order.[2]

The order of the Template:Key press list corresponds directly to the z-order, once the windows have been sorted according to 'always-on-top' status. Alt-Shift-Esc is equivalent to one Alt-Shift-Tab except that minimized windows are selected without being displayed.[3]

Windows-specific issues and hacks

Template:Key press works even if Windows Explorer is no longer running. On Windows NT 3.51 and prior, Template:Key press is managed by CSRSS (Client/Server Runtime Subsystem). On Windows NT 4.0 and later, it's handled by the kernel mode windowing system driver (win32k.sys).[4] It works even when [[Control-Alt-Delete|Template:Key press]] and Template:Key press (Task Manager) (which are managed by Winlogon) do not.[5]

Template:Key press may be intercepted (or effectively disabled) by means of a low-level keyboard hook.[6] Such a technique is used by applications such as the Virtual Network Computing (VNC) viewer to pass Template:Key press keystrokes to the remote desktop when the VNC window is active.

Under Windows XP, the Tweak UI PowerToy,[7] can adjust the number of rows and columns in the task list window, or it can be adjusted via a registry edit.[8] This is helpful if there are so many windows that the list would spill over into multiple pages.

Another Microsoft PowerToy, Template:Key press Replacement,[7] is available for Windows XP that displays a screenshot of each application in the task list rather than just its icon, and allows the user to use the mouse to select the desired application. A more advanced version of this functionality, named Windows Flip, is built into Windows Vista.

A number of third-party tools, similar to Template:Key press Replacement, are also available that add additional functionality to Template:Key press.

Additionally, Windows Vista and Windows 7 allow the user to navigate through the Template:Key press menu using mouse or arrow keys.

When the Aero Glass theme is enabled, Windows Vista also offers a 3D view of the windows themselves that animates as the user cycles through it. The behaviour is very similar to Template:Key press and is accessed by holding down the [[Windows key|Template:Key press key]] instead of Template:Key press while pressing Template:Key press. While this view is visible, windows can be selected and made active by clicking on them with the mouse, and the list can be scrolled forward or backward using the mouse scroll wheel.

If there is only one window on the system, Windows does not show a selector dialog at all when Template:Key press is pressed; the key sequence will simply restore or give focus to that window in case it is minimized or not focused. This means that under Windows 10, Template:Key press no longer functions as a way to switch out of a full-screen application, since the desktop is no longer a window.

If the user prefers the smaller XP icons over the larger Vista "thumbnail" icons, they can change the functionality by:

  • Start → Computer
  • Hit the "System Properties" button (on the Toolbar under the File | Edit toolbar)
  • Select "Advanced System Settings" (under Tasks grouping in the left-hand column); this brings up the "System Properties" dialog box, which should show the "Advanced Tab".
  • Hit the Settings Button under Performance. Uncheck the "Enable Desktop Composition" checkbox (the 3rd checkbox from the top in the Custom list box).
  • Hit OK

The user may also stop the Dwm.exe process via Windows' Task Manager.

In Windows 7 Template:Key press, after a one-second delay, displays the full-sized application window immediately each time the cursor position changes, hiding all other windows. This is a part of Aero Peek feature, new in Windows 7. This behavior can be disabled along with Aero Peek: Control Panel - Performance Information and Tools - Adjust visual effects - uncheck Enable Aero Peek.

Delay is adjustable by setting the LivePreview_ms value in HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\AltTab registry key.

Some users report that the switcher dialog does not stay on top[9][10] while it is displayed, but one can navigate through this dialog using mouse even if it is completely overlapped by some window. This bug is reported to be user profile specific. Some user profiles on the same machine may encounter this bug, some not. As discovered, the problem is sometimes caused by desktop gadgets system. After killing sidebar.exe process (which hosts the gadgets), the problem disappears. After restarting sidebar the problem appears again. This bug also happens when ipoint.exe, the Microsoft Intellipoint mouse driver, is running. Other programs causing this behaviour were reported as well.[11]

The actual reason this problem occurs is because [zero-sized always-on-top windows at (0,0)] cause Windows Explorer to set the alt-tab properties incorrectly. The solution is to download and run a program which will remove these flags.[12] downloadTemplate:Dead linkTemplate:Cbignore

To show the XP icons in Windows 7 advanced users can add a new DWORD value AltTabSettings in the registry key HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Software\Microsoft\Windows\CurrentVersion\Explorer\ and set its value to 1.

Using Windows 7 the additional key combination Template:Key press brings up the switcher dialog and it remains on screen after all the keys have been released. A user can move through the dialog in any direction using the arrow keys, or Template:Key press through in a linear manner, wrapping at the end of the list back to the beginning. In this mode, the Template:Key press key or a mouse click selects the desired window which gains the focus and the dialog is dismissed; Template:Key press dismisses with no change of focus.

In Windows 7, to use a switcher dialog similar to that in XP, one can keep Left-Template:Key press pressed, tap on Right-Template:Key press and then press Template:Key press.

There is a common[13][14] problem associated with the use of Template:Key press. It is very easy for the user to mistakenly use Template:Key press instead, changing the system language through the use of a default keybind. To solve this issue, go into Control Panel/Regional Settings/Languages/Details and there is a button that allows the user to configure the shortcuts to switch languages - he/she can disable it or change it to something harder to press by mistake. This problem is reported on Windows XP and Windows 7.

Non-Windows functionality

File:MacOS Big Sur Task Switcher.png
Command Tab switcher on Mac OS Big Sur.

macOS

Similar functionality exists on macOS using Template:Key press instead of Template:Key press, and switching between applications rather than windows. The Mac's switcher has the additional capabilities of pointing at the desired icon with the mouse (also present in Windows Vista and above), and dropping files on applications' icons. Selected application can be hidden or closed using Template:Key press or Template:Key press keys without closing the menu. Template:Key press works similarly to switch between windows within the same application. Once Template:Keypress has been invoked, Template:Key press changes behavior to mimic Template:Key press (i.e. it cycles backwards). Using Template:Key press or Template:Key press allows the user to select the window to focus on. The Template:Key press and Template:Key press arrow keys may also be used to navigate the application switcher.

This functionality does not automatically restore windows from an application in which all windows been minimized. To restore a window, one needs to press Template:Key press as many times as necessary to choose the desired application, and hold the Option key just prior to releasing the Command button. This will restore the most relevantScript error: No such module "Unsubst". window in the application.

There was no default key binding for application switching in Classic Mac OS. Third party control panels (such as ApplWindows and LiteSwitch) provided this behavior.

File:IPadOS Command+Tab.png
Command Tab switcher in iOS.

iOS

iOS adds comparable functionality using Template:Key press instead of Template:Key press, as with macOS. The iOS switcher allows the user to move between recently used applications (nine in landscape, six in portrait), as opposed to "open" applications, since the concept of an open application is considerably less clear on iOS than other desktop operating systems. Template:Key press cycles backwards, as in OS X.

Unix

Unix-like desktop systems such as fvwm, KDE, Xfce, and GNOME have added a compatible function. On some systems including Sun's CDE and old versions of fvwm, the Template:Key press key combination is mapped to less sophisticated functionality such as only alternating between two windows, cycling forward or backward in a list of all windows in a fixed order, or opening a task applet in which one has to use arrow keys or the mouse to select a task and then click or push Enter. Some window managers such as WindowLab forego the onscreen window list and simply bring each window to the front in turn as Template:Key press is pressed.

Not all window managers provide this functionality as a core feature. For example, Blackbox does not; users desiring this behavior can add it by running a helper application such as bbkeys.

File:Compiz-fusion-switcher-flip.jpg
Flip Switcher in Compiz Fusion.

Compiz Fusion

Compiz Fusion (aka Beryl, Compiz) has similar functionality, but displays a preview of the window as well as its icon (Present in Windows Vista and above, with DWM enabled). It also makes use of Alt-Shift-Tab by moving backwards through the displayed programs, and it is possible to activate a Windows Flip 3D alternative using the Windows key and Tab.

GNOME

The Metacity window manager has similar functionality to versions of Windows released before Vista, but it only displays the outline of the currently selected window on the screen. Windows, on the other hand shows the whole selected window, which helps the user to pick the correct window from multiple windows with a similar title or icon.

History

The Template:Key press key combination to switch between windows has been present in all versions of Windows since Windows 1.0.[15] However, there was no visual indication of the list of windows available when switching between windows until Windows 3.1, when this feature was introduced as the 'Fast "Alt+TAB" Switching' checkbox in the Display control panel applet, internally known as "CoolSwitch".[16]

Before CoolSwitch, the Template:Key press combination was similar to the Template:Key press combination (which also switched windows), but Template:Key press redrew each window immediately on each stroke, while Template:Key press brought the windows to the top but did not redraw them until the Alt key was released.

Inconsistency

An example of a program that violates the expectation that pressing Template:Key press one time will switch to the previous application is Adobe Reader 7.0.x. Like newer versions of Microsoft Word it attempts to give a separate icon in the Template:Key press task menu to each MDI document. However, unlike Word, it brings two items to the front of the list whenever a document is selected using Template:Key press: first an icon representing the main Reader window and then an icon for the individual document. While in Adobe Reader, pressing Template:Key press one time selects the second item in the list, which is the icon for the PDF document. Adobe Reader remains the current task when Template:Key press is released. Thus it is demonstrated that the correct operation of Template:Key press, like some other aspects of the Windows environment such as the Clipboard chain, depends on individual applications being written correctly.

See also

References

  1. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  2. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  3. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  4. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  5. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  6. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  7. a b Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  8. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  9. Windows 7 - Alt-Tab icon list does not stay on top
  10. Alt-tab window won't stay on top of other windows in Windows 7
  11. Windows 7 alt-tab window disappears to back when aero peek is enabled
  12. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  13. Windows 7 - Keyboard keeps changing language
  14. How to avoid keyboard layout automatically changing on windows
  15. Script error: No such module "citation/CS1".
  16. Windows 3.1 Resource Kit WIN.INI Section Settings

External links