
The idea is that repeated notifications will help you to learn these shortcuts naturally as you work. Whenever you use your mouse to do a task that a keyboard shortcut could have accomplished more quickly, a KeyRocket popup will notify you of the shortcut. Opening this shortcut later will open your minecraft folder.When your long cheat sheet of Windows shortcuts becomes too inconvenient, KeyRocket is here to teach you Windows keyboard shortcuts more intuitively.
Drag that shortcut (not the original!) to your Desktop or anywhere else convenient. A shortcut named minecraft alias will appear. Right click on minecraft to get the context menu, and choose Make Alias. Navigate up one more folder, so that you're looking at your Application Support folder. Now that you're here, you may want to make a shortcut (also called an alias) to make this slightly easier. If it gives you errors or says you can't do that, then that's OK, no harm done - you just have to give up on this method and use the easy method. Run Terminal.app, and when it's ready, copy this command into it and press enter: /usr/bin/chflags nohidden ~/Library Either search for Terminal.app, or find it inside Applications → Utilities. To un-hide your Library, you need to run a command inside Terminal.app. With an unhidden Library, you can always get to your minecraft folder by navigating Home → Library → Application Support → minecraft.
If you're Master and Commander of this computer and you're not worried you'll break anything though, I find this way more convenient.
If you have any doubts, just use the easy method. (Minecraft being an exception, because you're here to mess with it on purpose instead of accidentally.) The Library is hidden mostly because things can go slightly (not usually badly, but inconveniently) wrong if the files inside it are messed with.
if you're concerned about you or someone else messing with the stuff inside Library and breaking something. You can tell MacOS to un-hide your Library. Navigate up one folder by typing ⌘ ↑ and you will be looking at your minecraft folder. You will now have a finder window open that is inside your minecraft folder. Click Options…, Resource Packs…, then at the bottom of this screen, find and click Open Resource Pack Folder. There are two ways to get to your minecraft folder: 1. The minecraft folder lives inside your Application Support folder, which is inside your personal Library folder… which MacOS hides from you.