Finder

>what is touch [filename] ?

Good. It's been that way for literally 20 years. It's the way it should be.

This. The CLI is a thing. Use it.

>can't create a new file (really)

File managers are for managing existing files, not creating new ones. That's what applications are for.

>can't rename hidden files

Cmd + Shift + . (period)

>can't merge directories when pasting

It's not nice to lie on the internet, user. (Pic related)

>pressing enter renames file instead of opening it

durr it dun wurk liek mah winderz, it bad

>can't trigger hover events on inactive windows

You absolutely can if the inactive window belongs to the app you're currently on.

>can't trigger clicks on inactive windows without clicking the window active first

This is called "clickthrough," and the point of blocking it on inactive windows is to prevent potentially destructive actions from being done by accident. Many well-designed applications do allow clickthrough on specific, non-destructive actions.

>mis-clicking menus closes them instead of letting you retry

In what GUI does a menu remain on-screen after selecting an item from it?

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>File managers are for managing existing files, not creating new ones. That's what applications are for.
And phones are for making calls, you should get a Nokia 3310 if you're so against features.
Anyway my distro does not have this problem.

>>can't merge directories when pasting
>It's not nice to lie on the internet, user. (Pic related)
It can't. In Linux and Windows you get a prompt asking you for each individual file what action you want to take, and you can decide to use one decision for all the following conflicts. MacOS just makes you pick which folder to prefer for every conflict.

>You absolutely can if the inactive window belongs to the app you're currently on.
And sometimes it doesn't and I'd like it to. It's yet another simple feature my distro can do and your rinky dink OS can't .

>>can't trigger clicks on inactive windows without clicking the window active first
>This is called "clickthrough," and the point of blocking it on inactive windows is to prevent potentially destructive actions from being done by accident.
Not all your users are braindead.

fpbp

This thread again?

>fagOS

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OP
>can't into computer

This asspain again?

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