Mac Geek Gab listener Dan Grondin sent us a tip. It involves the command line on your Mac, but thanks to the magic of copy-paste, it's still very easy to do. From Mr. Grondin:
My life is full of joy since i learned how to reduce the time it take to see the dock popping to existence when the cursor hit the edge of the screen (i want it as fast as possible).
Fair enough, Mr. Grondin!
First, you'll want to set your Dock to auto-hide. You can do so in System Preferences -> Dock, as shown below.
El Capitan System Preferences -> Dock preferences
Next, type or copy-paste the following into the Terminal in OS X:
defaults write com.apple.dock autohide-time-modifier -int 0 && Killall Dock
Terminal Command
What that command does is create (or modify, if it's already been created) a preference file that tells OS X how long to take when displaying the Dock. In this case, the wait is 0, as in instantaneous. The Dock is there and then not there the moment your mouse/trackpad hits or leaves the edge of your screen.
The last segment of that command—”&& Killall Dock”—is telling your Mac to quit and restart the Dock process. It can also be run on its own line without the two ampersands.
You can make that value any number you want, so if you're the type who wants the Dock to appear more slowly, you can make it a higher number. At 10, it takes about 3 seconds total for the Dock to appear, maybe a bit longer. At 100, you can watch it happen frame by frame over the course of about 28 seconds. A value of 0.5 make an instantaneous appearance, without animation, after a split second's delay.
I believe the default value is 1, which is less than a second. If you want to go back to the way Apple intended it, you can either add in that value by hand, or use the following command to remove the preference file altogether:
defaults delete com.apple.dock autohide-time-modifier && killall Dock
Terminal Command
And that's it! You can tweak your Dock's appearance and disappearance until your heart's content.