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Start here: the one idea that makes a Mac click

If you've used Windows for years, the move to a MacBook is mostly about retraining your hands — not relearning everything. Here's the mental model.

The hardest part of moving from Windows to a Mac isn't learning a new computer. It's that your hands already know the old one. Your fingers reach for Ctrl + C before your brain finishes the thought. So the goal here isn't to relearn everything — it's to remap a few reflexes.

Here's the single most useful thing to internalize:

Tip

Almost everywhere you pressed Ctrl on Windows, you'll press on a Mac.

Copy, paste, save, find, new tab, quit — all of them just move from Ctrl to Command (the key beside the spacebar). Once that reflex shifts, most of the friction disappears in a day or two.

What's actually different

A handful of things genuinely work differently, and those are worth a few minutes each:

  • Right-clicking — there's no separate right button; you click with two fingers.
  • The window buttons are on the left, and the green one means "full screen," not "maximize."
  • Closing a window doesn't quit the app — that's why the app stays in the Dock.
  • The Delete key deletes backward (it's really a Backspace).

Each of these has a short guide over in the guides section.

How to use this site

  • The reference is the full keystroke-by-keystroke translation — search it when a shortcut doesn't do what you expect.
  • The guides cover the everyday actions that don't map to a single key.
  • The videos are there for when you'd rather watch someone do it.

Take the first week slowly, lean on the reference, and let the muscle memory catch up. It will.