![]() Save yourself time and effort with the tips in those posts!Ĭopyright 2008-2023 Christian Boyce. Sorry about that.Ĭlick here to see all of my blog posts involving the Option key. It works! And since it’s “your” copy of the 1040, you can save it for later, just like I did. Try double-clicking on the downloaded 1040 form and typing. ![]() Like this: Filled-in 1040 form, opened in Preview In all the iOS 14, iPadOS 14, watchOS 7 and tvOS 14 noise, Apple has also released an update to. OS X 10.10 Yosemite is the latest version of Apples operating system. Take a look at Mac OS X El Capitan instead. By Browsing: If you want to find the Downloads folder by browsing a file path, start at your Macintosh HD root folder, then navigate to Users > Username > Downloads. (Go to Safari/Preferences…/General to determine, or to set, where downloaded files go.) Now it’s just another PDF, something you can double-click and open and fill in and save. Safari 14 for Mac is Better than Ever with Loads of Performance Enhancements, Download it Today. This program can no longer be downloaded. Or press Command+Comma (,), click Sidebar and place a check mark beside Downloads in the list. Presto! The file is downloaded to your Downloads folder, or to your Desktop, or wherever it is your downloads go. Try it again, but this time hold the Option key when you click the link. Nice to look at, but it’s not “yours.” So it’s hard (or impossible) to type anything in the form (or to save it, which you almost certainly want to do). ![]() Here’s what it looks like in your browser: 1040 form loaded in Safari You see the form, but you don’t have the form. Without the Option key, when you click the Form 1040 link it opens in your browser. ![]() You find the form you want, and now you want to get a copy and save it to your hard disk. Suppose you’re looking for tax forms on the IRS website. Try it fifty times and fifty times it’s the same– you don’t actually download the PDF, you just see it in the browser.īut, if you hold the Option key when you click the link, you will download a copy to your Mac for later use. Ever click a link in Safari (or Chrome), hoping to download a PDF, and instead of downloading, the thing opens up in the browser (or worse, in Acrobat)? That’s a drag. ![]()
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