![]() ![]() Figure 4.4 shows the Money app snapped to the left side of the screen, while Internet Explorer covers the rest. This means that the app automatically resizes itself to half the screen width and parks itself on the left or right side of the screen, and then the next app takes up the rest of the screen. You do this by snapping the current app to the left or right side of the screen. So, for example, you could display your Money app stock watch list while simultaneously surfing the Web, or watch what your Facebook friends are up to while also shopping in the Windows Store. One way you can take advantage of the “windowness” of apps (both Modern and Desktop) is to show more than one app onscreen at the same time. You’ll see this for yourself over the next three sections as we take you through various techniques for manipulating running apps. Fortunately, that window weirdness is behind us now, and in Windows 10 all apps appear within bona fide, readily recognizable windows. ![]() Apps technically did appear in a window it’s just that by default those windows took up the entire screen. After all, when you launched an app, it didn’t appear inside a box. One of the ironies of Windows 8/8.1 “features” that we didn’t like was that, at least as far as the interface went, there no longer seemed to be any windows. Learn More Buy Working with Running Apps Windows 10 In Depth (includes Content Update Program) ![]()
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