

With Shortcuts being the exception on iOS and iPadOS as the only interactive widget, that user experience should be extended to the Lock Screen as well - namely because of mismatched expectations. Why Apple should add a Lock Screen Shortcuts widget anyway Those same limitations expand to the Lock Screen widgets today in iOS 16, where these glanceable snippets of information are likely intended to be viewed from the dimmed state of the always-on display, plus show more when the phone is activated.Īs it stands today, every Lock Screen widget is "non-interactive" - and rather than having Shortcuts' widget being the exception again, Apple chose to stick to it.īut that meant simply not creating a Shortcuts widget at all. Shortcuts is the exception to that rule, whose original Workflow widget carved its own path that still exists to this day with the Shortcuts widget being able to run shortcuts without ever opening the app. Today, all other apps (besides Shortcuts) do not have any sort of interaction capability besides opening their app to respond to a tap on the widget. Thankfully, that initial ruling was reversed and both PCalc and Workflow ended up with interactive widgets - for a time. This initial disapproval from Apple over interactive widgets expanded to the Workflow app, the original version of Shortcuts - the team didn’t add a Workflow widget originally, because running workflows from the widget would fall short of the rules from Apple.

This extends all the way back to the introduction of Today widgets in iOS 8, where the venerated calculator app PCalc was rejected for making a functional calculator in the widget at a time when Apple wanted you to see what was “happening today” in that screen. When you want to use the device, you just need to press the key combination that quickly turns off the previous machine to access the login window.Tracing back to their origins as Apple Watch complications, widgets are supposed to be glanceable, update with new information over time, and provide contextually-relevant information. The above is a tutorial on how to use the shortcut to quickly lock the computer screen on Mac OS X. In the Keyboard Shortcut section, we can set arbitrary shortcuts to turn off the computer like Command + L. Under the Menu Title section, enter the previously saved name Lock Screen. Then press the + button to add a shortcut.Īt the new window, select All Applications.

Go to System Preferences and select Keyboard> Keyboard Shorcuts> App Shortcut. Prioritize simple naming for easy implementation in the following steps, such as Lock Screen. Next go to File> Save or press Command + S and set an arbitrary name in the Save service as section.
