
After reading our feature-by-feature comparison of Windows 7 and OS X, in which we noted that the Mac menu bar is "fixed to the top of your Mac's screen with no easy way to hide it," reader J writes in to point us toward an old Macworld step-by-step guide for doing just that—though, like we mentioned, it's not as simple as doing so with the Windows system tray. Using this method, you can set your menu bar and Dock to automatically hide on an application-by-application basis. For example, if you edit your TextEdit PLIST file using this method (which I did to test this), your menu bar and Dock will automatically hide when TextEdit is the active application. To see either, just hover your mouse to the respective edge of your monitor. For other apps, your default behavior will remain.
The tutorial requires you to edit a Property List (or PLIST) file, which is serious business, so backing up your original PLIST file is probably a good idea. Since MacWorld's instructions are a little out of date, here's how it works in Leopard:
- Find the application you want to turn on Dock hiding for, then right-click or Ctrl-click the application and choose Show Package Contents.
- Once inside, double-click the Contents folder, find the file named Info.plist, and double-click that to open it with the Property List Editor.
- Now select the Information Property List entry and click the Add Item button.
- Save the PLIST (Cmd-S) and launch (or re-launch) the app whose PLIST you were editing. Your Dock and menu bar should automatically hide. How clean!
How to hide the menu bar and Dock [Mac OS X Hints]