Tip: If you dont see 'Empty trash', on the top next to Trash, click Down arrow Empty trash. In System Preferences > Keyboard > Keyboard Shortcuts, add a shortcut for Preview (Move Selected PDF Document to Trash) that you are unlikely to type inadvertently, something like. If you’ve tried ⌘-D in a dialog box you know it doesn’t click the Delete (or Delete Copy) button– instead, it changes the current directory to the Desktop folder, a good thing to be able to do, but not what we wanted. Make sure there are no files you want to keep. Used to be, a button could be clicked with either just the first letter of the button (“D” for Delete) or ⌘ and the first letter (“⌘-D”), in just about any program. You can also click the Finder icon in the Dock. Empty all of the Trash: Click the Empty button in the upper-right corner of the Finder window. In the warning message that appears, click Delete. Empty one item from the Trash: Control-click the item you want to delete, then choose Delete Immediately. To search for and locate files you want to delete, see Narrow your search results. On your Mac, click the Trash icon in the Dock. If an item is locked, click Continue to confirm you want to move the locked item to the Trash. Turns out that every button in those boxes is clickable from the keyboard: On your Mac, drag the item to the Trash in the Dock or select the item, then press Command-Delete. But not from the keyboard– unless you know The Secret. In these case, what you’re trying to do, if you don’t care about saving the “changes” is to click the Delete, or Delete Copy button. This will delete your last word at once in one move. In those cases, the dialog box about saving “the new copy” is just a nuisance.) To delete your last word entirey, simply hold the Option key down then press Delete. (In some cases, an opened attachment will consider itself “changed” just because you opened it.
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