Keeping folders on desktop

Clean up your computers embarrassingly messy desktop. Seriously. Please.

We're literally begging you.

By David Nield | Published Jun 3, 2021 8:00 AM

  • Technology
  • DIY
A clean computer desktop is a beautiful sight. Free-Photos/Pixabay
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This post has been updated. It was originally published on September 2, 2018.

All too often, our computer desktops serve as a dumping ground for all kinds of random bits and pieces. Anything that doesnt have an obvious and permanent home elsewhere on the systemdownloads, pictures, shortcuts, notes, installers, and other digital detritusacts as a distraction on your Windows or macOS machine.

This mass of icons isnt conducive to a smooth computing experience, so we collected some tricks and tools to clean it up. You should be able to whip your computers front page into shapemaking it look much cleaner and more professionalin no time.

Create desktop folders

The desktop acts much like your computers other storage locations, which means you can organize it with folders and subfolders. So take a look at the types of items you drop on your desktop and see if they fall into categories like internet downloads, documents from colleagues, application shortcuts, and so on. Then set up folders for the most common ones. This should significantly cut down the number of icons on your desktop.

To create a new folder on Windows, right-click on a blank part of the the desktop and select New, followed by Folder; on macOS, Ctrl+click and choose New Folder.

Once youve sorted items into folders, you can organize their icons in moments. On Windows, sort your files by name or date by right-clicking on a blank area of the desktop and choosing Sort by. You can also right-click and choose View > Auto arrange icons to snap the on-screen icons into a grid formation. On macOS, open Finder and click View > Clean Up By to organize files by date or type, though this option only appears if youre viewing your desktops contents in Finder as Icons or viewing the View tab straight from the desktop. It will also arrange your files into a neat grid.

[Related: 7 apps and tools to help organize your life]

Another way to reduce clutter is to create a dedicated temporary folder for stuff you wont need for long, such as program installers or images you plan to attach to an email. This keeps unnecessary items from filling up your desktop space. Every so often, open the temporary folder and delete its contents to get rid of outdated filesthis takes much less time than sorting through desktop icons, and you wont need to worry about accidentally deleting something important.

For macOS only: Try Stacks

Apples operating system comes with a useful desktop-tidying function called Stacks. This feature stacks [get it?] items by file type, creating virtual piles of pictures, documents, and other files. This results in a much cleaner desktop.

To enable Stacks, Ctrl+click on a blank area of the desktop to bring up the Finder menu, and then choose Use Stacks. If you want to collate icons by a criteria other than file typesay tags or the date they were last modifiedselect View, Show View Options, and select your sorting method from the drop-down menu next to Stack By.

Once you start using Stacks, files and folders will instantly sort themselves into neat piles, which will sit in rows and columns starting in the top right corner of the screen. To expand a Stack, click on it, and the files it contains will temporarily spill back into view, allowing you to access or modify individual items. To run an operation on all the files in a Stacklike moving themCtrl+click on the Stack icon and choose an option from the menu that pops up.

Install a third-party utility

Theres always the option to enlist the services of a third-party app. These tend to work on one specific operating system, so we collected a couple options for Windows and another two for macOS.

If you own a Windows machine, we like Fences [$10, free trial available], which lets you group your shortcuts and files into buckets, much like you would arrange app shortcuts on a phone. Then it hides or shows those buckets as needed, which results in a much cleaner desktop appearance. Nimi Places [free] works similarly: It splits the desktop into customizable containers, but these containers point to subfolders on your system [such as the Documents folder or any other folder youve created]. This allows you to shift files and shortcuts off your desktop, but keep them within easy reach.

For macOS, one impressive option is Spotless [$28, free trial available], which analyzes all the files on your desktop [as well as other storage locations] and automatically moves them into designated folders based on your rules. For example, you can have the app drop photos into a pictures folder, Microsoft Word files into a documents folder, and so on. Spotless runs quietly in the background, kicking in to tidy up on a set schedule. Declutter [free] works much like Spotless, but its a bit more basic and streamlined. When you drop a file on your desktop, the app automatically whisks that item into a specific folder based on the rules you set up in advance. This can happen instantly, daily, or on a custom schedule.

Adjust your download settings

You dont want to declutter your screen only to watch icons pile back up as soon as you finish. To help keep things tidy, you can save fewer files to your desktop in the first place.

[Related: How to convert a file to any format]

It doesnt take an app to do this: When youre downloading a file or transferring an image to another location, just think about whether it really needs to go on the desktop at all. After all, youll only need seconds to find a different folder on your system. You can even adjust where files end up once you download themit just takes a tweak to your browser settings.

In Google Chrome, open the program menu by clicking the three dots in the top right corner, choose Settings > Advanced > Downloads, and click Change next to Location. In Microsoft Edge, open the app menu by clicking the three dots in the top right corner, select Settings, and change the default folder location under the Downloads heading. In Safari, head to Safari > Preferences > General and make your choice from the File download location menu. Finally, in Firefox, open the program menu by clicking the three lines in the top right, head to Settings > General, and change where you save files to under Downloads [located under the Files and Applications heading].

Even with these new settings, it cant hurt to run a weekly or monthly desktop cleanup. Put in five or so minutes of tidying time, and youll get through more deleting and organizing than you think. If you prefer to work with the desktop open as a normal folder, rather than a full-screen wallpaper-backed display, you can do this in File Explorer [for Windows] or Finder [for macOS].

David Nield

David Nield is a tech journalist from the UK who has been writing about gadgets and apps since way before the iPhone and Twitter were invented. When he's not busy doing that, he usually takes breaks from all things tech with long walks in the countryside.

browsers
computer
desktops
DIY
evergreen

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