OutsideShooter wrote:
1. Maybe I missed a step in your explanation of 'using the up arrow' when saving, but mine only shows 'Locked' or not. I don't see an up arrow. And this is not on the' initial Save' but a renaming Save. Maybe that's why? In addition, several weeks/months go by and my expanded list to 50 doesn't show 50+ and the one I'm looking for might be 350th. Now I have to tax my memory, and often that isn't working for me.
The initial Save…, Save As…, or Export To > Save dialogs all have that arrow button on them as depicted in my previous post. That up/down arrow toggles the panel view from limited to expanded.
The Open Recent menu will show the Pages documents that you have opened and quit, or opened, edited, and saved. As I said, the Recent menu is a fixed stack of the size you set it to in System Settings. Once you exceed that stack size in opened documents, the oldest document is removed from it. That is how a stack behaves.
If you want to look for Pages documents older than your configured Recent menu stack holds, I will talk more about Spotlight below.
2.
You said: 'Look at the Pages File menu > Open Recent menu. Are there filenames there, or not? If so, selecting one will open it in Pages without you needing to know its location. Deleted documents are not automatically removed from this Recent Pages document stack.' If this is true, how does one permanently delete them?
I left a comment at Pages - Thank You - Apple but who knows if it will even be considered, or read. Everyone believes that they are but we can't know that for sure. While I'm not saying they have the time to respond to everyone, why not like right here in Support, we could log in to see if it was read and if any comments by the team there were added.
These are fellow Mac user-supported public communities. No Apple employees participate here. There is a Provide Pages Feedback application menu that goes directly to the Pages product team, but owing to the volume of this feedback, they most likely will not respond to the email associated with your Apple ID or included on that feedback.
Spotlight is a tool that indexes files on your Mac and from which the Finder or the Spotlight tool allows one to locate files on your Mac. The Spotlight categories can be seen in System Settings > Spotlight panel. I have all of these selected except Siri Suggestions. Your Mac may be already indexing files but to be certain, select those categories (especially Documents) and on that panel, click the Search Privacy… button.
On that search Privacy panel, you would drag and drop your Macintosh HD icon on your Desktop into Privacy Locations drop area, wait 10 seconds, and then click on Macintosh HD on that panel and then click [-] to remove it. Once removed, Spotlight will begin to index the files on your startup drive. Give that about 15 - 30 minutes to finish.
Now, you can search for Pages documents older than what is shown on your Pages Open Recent stack. Here are some examples of a Spotlight search that can be applied after clicking the 🔍 on the top right Finder menu bar, or from the Search panel in an open Finder Window. Apple has a support document for narrowing your search in Spotlight or Finder:
Narrow your search results on Mac - Apple Support
Find any Pages document created in the last month:
kind:pages created:11/01/2024-11/30/2024
Any Pages document created in 2024 (you can use <>- characters for before, after, or between dates)
kind:pages created:>01/01/2024
Any Pages document modified after June 1, 2024, in which you used a Baskerville font:
kind:pages modified:>06/01/2024 font:baskerville
Any Pages document created after Sept 2024 whose name contains a partial (case-insensitive) string. In this case, looking for a Pages document named kant_jacobian.pages:
kind:pages created:>09/01/2024 name:kant
If you are using the Finder menu item 🔍 to initiate a Spotlight search, you can arrow down to the specific found document. By pressing the cmd key, it will show you the file location, or by pressing cmd+R it will open a Finder window with that file selected. Simply pressing the return key of a selected file will open it in Pages.