Oct 28, 2013  Yes, the Show Library option is ALWAYS in the “View Options” window in OS X 10.9.5, you need to be in your HOME folder to be able to see the Show Library option in View Options window. It’s your User Library, thus you need to be in the User Home. In Finder, open Finder - Preferences.On the sidebar 'tab' tick the box for the little house; this corresponds to /Users/username. /Library/ may be hidden, if you're on Mountain Lion.If so, hold down the Alt / Option key while clicking on the Go menu, and it will appear so you can then click on it. The rest should follow. Mac Software How to. We aim to cover the whole of macOS/Mac OS X System Preferences in this article. Apple includes a bunch of folders in.

May 23, 2013  Is this two questions? Subject and body say different things. The preference file can be accessed h olding down the option key while using the Finder “ Go To Folder ” command. Enter /Library/Preferences. If you prefer to make your user library permanently visible, use the Terminal command found below. Does anyone know of a resource that lists the Preferences files/plists (pertinent to OS X and Apple applications, not third-party apps) found in /Library/Preferences (and the other locations too, but that would be a start) and what they're used for? I've been looking around and can't find anything. But if you’d prefer to clean house with a new machine and just transfer user preferences to your new Mac, you can. Copy everything in the user’s home folder except the Library folder to your transfer media. You can copy the files by dragging and dropping, just as you would with a normal directory. Type in /Library/Preferences to.

Is this two questions? Subject and body say different things.


The preference file can be accessed holding down the option key while using the Finder Go To Folder command. Enter ~/Library/Preferences.


If you prefer to make your user library permanently visible, use the Terminal command found below.

You might want to bookmark the command. I had to use it again after I installed 10.8.2. I have also been informed that if you drag the user library to Finder it will remain visible.

May 23, 2013 2:47 PM

The invisible Library subfolder of your Home folder is the repository of everything that OS X needs to customize your Mac to your tastes. If you want to add something to a Library folder, it’s usually best to add it to your Home/Library folder.

You won’t spend much time (if any) adding things to the Library folder or moving them around within it, and that’s probably why it’s now hidden from sight. Still, it’s a good idea for you to know what’s in your Home/Library.

The public Library folder is used to specify preferences for all users on this Mac. This Library folder, however, is all about you and your stuff.

Be cautious with all Library folders. OS X is very persnickety about how the folders and files within it are organized. You can add items to and remove items safely from most public or Home Library folders, but leave the folders themselves alone. If you remove or rename the wrong folder, you could render OS X inoperable.

It’s like the old joke about the guy who said to the doctor, “It hurts when I do that,” and the doctor replies, “Then don’t do that.”

To find your hidden Home/Library folder, do this:

  1. Repair mac photos library. Hold down the Option key on your keyboard.

  2. Click the Go menu.

    The (formerly) invisible Library folder appears in the Go menu as long as the Option key is pressed.

  3. Select Library and release the mouse button.

You should see several folders in the Home/Library folder; the exact number depends on the software that you install on your Mac. You probably have folders called Mail, Safari, Logs, and Preferences, for example.

Mac Preferences Error

If you don’t want to have to do this dance every time you want to open your Home/Library, select your Home folder in the Finder and choose View→Show View Options (or press Command+J). Enable the Show Library Folder check box and your Home Library will be visible evermore (or at least until you deselect the check box).

Some of the most important standard folders in the Library folder include the following: Show user library mac terminal.

Home Library Preferences Machine

  • Application Support: Some applications store their support files here; others store theirs in the main (root-level) public Library folder.

  • Fonts: This folder is empty until you install your own fonts here. The easiest way to install a font is to double-click its icon and let the Font Book utility handle it for you. Here’s how to install a font manually:

    • To install a font that only you can use: Drag the font file’s icon to the Fonts folder in your Home/Library. The font is available only to this user account (because other users can’t use fonts stored in yourHome/Library folder).

    • To install a font for all users of this Mac: Drag the font file’s icon into the Fonts folder in the public Library folder — the one at root level that you see when you open your hard drive’s icon.

  • Preferences: The files here hold the information about whichever things you customize in OS X or in the applications you run. Whenever you change a system or application preference, that info is saved to a file in the Preferences folder.

    Don’t mess with the Preferences folder! You should never need to open or use this folder unless something bad happens — say, you suspect that a particular preferences file has become corrupted (that is, damaged). Just forget that you know about this folder and let it do its job.

    If you don’t know why you’re doing something to a folder (other than the Fonts folder) in your Home/Library, don’t do it. There must be some good reasons why Apple decided to hide the Home/Library folder in OS X Yosemite, and one of them is to keep you from accidentally screwing something up.