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Guide for changing your dev environment from Mac to Windows

The following tips and control equivalents should help you in your transition between a Mac and Windows (or WSL/Linux) development environment.

For app development, the nearest equivalent to Xcode would be Visual Studio. There is also a version of Visual Studio for Mac, if you ever feel the need to go back. For cross-platform source code editing (and a huge number of plug-ins) Visual Studio Code is the most popular choice.

Keyboard shortcuts

Tip

You can use PowerToys Keyboard Manager to map Windows shortcuts to the shortcuts you use on a Mac.

Operation Mac Windows
Copy Command+C Ctrl+C
Cut Command+X Ctrl+X
Paste Command+V Ctrl+V
Undo Command+Z Ctrl+Z
Save Command+S Ctrl+S
Open Command+O Ctrl+O
Lock computer Command+Control+Q WindowsKey+L
Show desktop Command+F3 WindowsKey+D
Open file browser Command+N WindowsKey+E
Minimize windows Command+M WindowsKey+M
Search Command+Space WindowsKey
Close active window Command+W Control+W
Switch current task Command+Tab Alt+Tab
Maximize a window to full screen Control+Command+F WindowsKey+Up
Save screen (Screenshot) Command+Shift+3 WindowsKey+Shift+S
Save window Command+Shift+4 WindowsKey+Shift+S
View item information or properties Command+I Alt+Enter
Select all items Command+A Ctrl+A
Select more than one item in a list (noncontiguous) Command, then click each item Control, then click each item
Type special characters Option+ character key Alt+ character key

Trackpad shortcuts

Note

Some of these shortcuts require a "Precision Trackpad", such as the trackpad on Surface devices and some other third-party laptops.

Trackpad options are configurable on both platforms.

Operation Mac Windows
Scroll Two finger vertical swipe Two finger vertical swipe
Zoom Two finger pinch in and out Two finger pinch in and out
Swipe back and forward between views Two finger sideways swipe Two finger sideways swipe
Switch virtual workspaces Four fingers sideways swipe Four fingers sideways swipe
Display currently open apps Four fingers upward swipe Three fingers upward swipe
Switch between apps N/A Slow three finger sideways swipe
Go to desktop Spread out four fingers Three finger swipe downwards
Open Cortana / Action center Two finger slide from right Three finger tap
Open extra information Three finger tap N/A
Show launchpad / start an app Pinch with four fingers Tap with four fingers

Command-line shells and terminals

Windows supports several command-line shells and terminals which sometimes work a little differently to the Mac's BASH shell and terminal emulator apps like Terminal and iTerm.

Windows shells

Windows has two primary command-line shells:

  1. PowerShell - PowerShell is a cross-platform task automation and configuration management framework, consisting of a command-line shell and scripting language built on .NET. Using PowerShell, administrators, developers, and power-users can rapidly control and automate tasks that manage complex processes and various aspects of the environment and operating system upon which it is run. PowerShell is fully open-source, and because it is cross-platform, also available for Mac and Linux.

    Mac and Linux BASH shell users: PowerShell also supports many command-aliases that you are already familiar with. For example:

    • List the contents of the current directory, using: ls
    • Move files with: mv
    • Move to a new directory with: cd <path>

    Some commands and arguments are different in PowerShell vs. BASH. Learn more by entering: get-help in PowerShell or checkout the compatibility aliases in the docs.

    To run PowerShell as an Administrator, enter "PowerShell" in your Windows start menu, then select "Run as Administrator."

  2. Windows Command Line (Cmd): Windows still ships the traditional Command Prompt (and Console – see below), providing compatibility with current and legacy MS-DOS-compatible commands and batch files. Cmd is useful when running existing/older batch files or command-line operations, but in general, users are recommended to learn and use PowerShell since Cmd is now in maintenance, and will not be receiving any improvements or new features in the future.

Linux shells

Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL) can now be installed to support running a Linux shell within Windows. This means that you can run bash, with whichever specific Linux distribution you choose, integrated right inside Windows. Using WSL will provide the kind of environment most familiar to Mac users. For example, you will ls to list the files in a current directory, not dir as you would with the traditional Windows Cmd Shell. To learn about installing and using WSL, see the Windows Subsystem for Linux Installation Guide. Linux distributions that can be installed on Windows with WSL include:

  1. Ubuntu 20.04 LTS
  2. Kali Linux
  3. Debian GNU/Linux
  4. openSUSE Leap 15.1
  5. SUSE Linux Enterprise Server 15 SP1

Just to name a few. Find more in the WSL install docs and install them directly from the Microsoft Store.

Windows Terminals

In addition to many 3rd party offerings, Microsoft provides two "terminals" – GUI applications that provide access to command-line shells and applications.

  1. Windows Terminal: Windows Terminal is a new, modern, highly configurable command-line terminal application that provides very high performance, low-latency command-line user experience, multiple tabs, split window panes, custom themes and styles, multiple "profiles" for different shells or command-line apps, and considerable opportunities for you to configure and personalize many aspects of your command-line user experience.

    You can use Windows Terminal to open tabs connected to PowerShell, WSL shells (like Ubuntu or Debian), the traditional Windows Command Prompt, or any other command-line app (e.g. SSH, Azure CLI, Git Bash).

  2. Console: On Mac and Linux, users usually start their preferred terminal application which then creates and connects to the user's default shell (e.g. BASH).

    However, due to a quirk of history, Windows users traditionally start their shell, and Windows automatically starts and connects a GUI Console app.

    While one can still launch shells directly and use the legacy Windows Console, it's highly recommended that users instead install and use Windows Terminal to experience the best, fastest, most productive command-line experience.

Apps and utilities

App Mac Windows
Settings and Preferences System Preferences Settings
Task manager Activity Monitor Task Manager
Disk formatting Disk Utility Disk Management
Text editing TextEdit Notepad
Event viewing Console Event Viewer
Find files/apps Command+Space Windows key