See what combination works best for you! Adding App-Specific Buttons
It’s easy to fill a lot of space with these things, and some of them are pretty useful.
RELATED: How to Adjust Volume and Brightness in One Gesture on the MacBook Pro Touch Bar And if none of this is what you want, you can output the result of anything put together in AppleScript. And there’s even the ability to switch or launch apps from the Touch Bar from within BetterTouchTool, which is good because BetterTouchTool and other applications for switching between applications do not play nicely together. You’ll see volume and brightness sliders (though I prefer to adjust volume and brightness in one gesture). The “Remaining Battery Time” widget shows you battery time on the Touchbar. There aren’t many widgets offered by default, but the ones that are there are pretty useful. You could also add buttons that launch useful things. I added a battery time remaining widget, and a button that launches one of the dumbest Touch Bar apps I could find. RELATED: From Pac-Man to Pianos: The Dumbest Touch Bar Apps We Could Find You can put whatever buttons you want here.
Tap this button and it expands to the left section of the Touch Bar, which is otherwise taken up by App Controls. Launch the latest version of BetterTouchTool for the first time and you’ll see a new button in the Touch Bar’s control strip. RELATED: How to Add or Remove Icons From Your MacBook Pro's Touch Bar Even better: you can make these buttons specific to any program, allowing you to retroactively add Touch Bar support to applications that otherwise wouldn’t have it. You can map buttons to keyboard shortcuts, program-specific functionality, or just about anything else you can imagine.
Fortunately, BetterTouchTool ($5, 45-day free trial)-which lets you add powerful gesture controls to macOS-now makes it possible to put whatever you want in the Touch Bar via a custom menu. There’s a surprising amount of choice there, but it’s not infinite, meaning you’re out of luck if you want trigger scripts or replace keyboard shortcuts using Touch Bar buttons. We’ve shown you how to add or remove icons to your Touch Bar, sticking with Apple’s own customization options. Is there a button, or piece of information, you wish you could add to the Touch Bar on your MacBook Pro? You can, and we’ll show you how to do it.