Menu Bar Commands
Beyond the main interface, Zenspire utilizes the standard macOS application menu bar at the top of your screen for several key actions.
Zenspire Menu
Section titled “Zenspire Menu”This standard macOS menu contains:
About Zenspire
: Opens the About window showing version information and credits.Settings... (⌘,)
: Opens the Settings window.- Standard macOS service options.
Hide Zenspire (⌘H)
Hide Others (⌥⌘H)
Show All
Quit Zenspire (⌘Q)
File Menu
Section titled “File Menu”This menu contains commands for creating new items in your library and managing application windows.
New Folder
(⌘N
): Creates a new folder. This command is context-aware: if a folder is selected, it creates a subfolder; otherwise, it creates a new top-level folder.New Top-Level Folder
(⌥⌘N
): Always creates a new folder at the top level of your library, regardless of your current selection.New Collection
(⇧⌘N
): Creates a new virtual Collection.New Window
(⌃⌘N
): Opens a second Zenspire window, allowing you to view two different parts of your library at once.
Image Menu
Section titled “Image Menu”This menu provides commands that operate on the currently selected image(s) in the Image Grid. These are particularly useful for performing actions on multiple images at once.
Favorite / Unfavorite
(.
): Toggles the Favorite status of the selected image(s). The menu item will intelligently change its title based on the selection.Pin / Unpin
(P
): Toggles the Pinned status of the selected image(s).Remove from Collection
(⌥⌘⌫
): Removes the selected image(s) from the collection you are currently viewing. This option is only enabled when viewing a collection.Delete Image
(⌘⌫
): Safely moves the selected image file(s) to the system Trash.
Help Menu
Section titled “Help Menu”Zenspire Help
: Opens this online manual in your default web browser.
Other Standard Menus
Section titled “Other Standard Menus”Zenspire also includes standard macOS menus like Edit
, View
, and Window
, which contain familiar system-level commands (e.g., Close Window (⌘W)
, Minimize (⌘M)
). The specific commands within these may vary based on context but generally follow standard macOS behavior.