Showcasing beautiful icon designs from the Mac App Store. Apr 23, 2001 Mac Help Forums. Mac OS X System & Mac Software. Changing icon of Allias Folder. Thread starter MrFrost; Start date Apr 23, 2001 M. MrFrost Registered. Apr 23, 2001 #1 I would like to change the icon of my 'Desktop (MacOs9)' Folder that is on my desktop. I changed the rest so I can't leave this one on it's own. The hint is just describing how to batch-remove all custom icons from a bunch of image files, which leaves the Finder to generate new ones on the fly. The problem is that in some situations (such as aliases), the Finder won't bother to generate an on-the-fly preview, so you end up with a generic image.
- The hint is just describing how to batch-remove all custom icons from a bunch of image files, which leaves the Finder to generate new ones on the fly. The problem is that in some situations (such as aliases), the Finder won't bother to generate an on-the-fly preview, so you end up with a generic image icon.
- Showcasing beautiful icon designs from the Mac App Store.
To find these icons in your own Mac OS X file system, open Finder, and go to:
/System/Library/CoreServices/CoreTypes.bundle/Contents/Resources
NOTE: In the CoreServices folder, you will have to right-click the file 'CoreTypes.bundle' and click 'Show Package Contents'.
Once you reach this Resources folders, you'll be able to get large, HD icons for various Apple products, including Macs, iPhones, iPads, and more. Each of these icons is 512x512 in size. In addition, you can also get icons for just about every built-in app in Mac OS X, including all the icons in Finder.
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All of these system icons are saved in the default Mac OS X icon format (.icns). Most image programs don't support this format, so you'll probably want to open these icons with Preview (which should be set as the default app to open .icns files) and go to File->Export in the menu bar of Preview. From here, you can save the icons as normal .png or .jpg files.
To make aliases of macOS Unix commands in your bash or zsh shell on macOS and earlier versions, it is done via your .bash_profile or .zsh file which lives in your home account directory, if the file does not already exist, just create one.
As of macOS 10.6 Catalina, Apple has made the zsh shell the default shell, previously it was the bash shell.
Launch Terminal from the /Application/Utilities folder
![Os x icons Os x icons](/uploads/1/3/3/8/133812304/709268656.jpg)
Go to your home directory by just entering cd followed by the ‘return’ key to enter the command:
List your home directory contents including invisible files to see if the file already exists, use:
Create the .bash_profile or .zsh file using the command line program called ‘nano’ if it doesn’t exist:
When the .bash_profile or .zsh file is created you are ready to enter your alias commands.
So here I am using the alias ‘l’ to alias the command ‘ls -lah’
So here I am using the alias ‘l’ to alias the command ‘ls -lah’
![Mac Os X Icons For Image Aliases Mac Os X Icons For Image Aliases](/uploads/1/3/3/8/133812304/508850204.jpg)
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In nano ‘control+o’ to write the file out and ‘control+x’ to exit the file.
Refresh the shell environment by entering the command below:
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Or..
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That’s it, now the alias will take effect.
To add other aliases just start a new line, and apply the same formatting.