How can I open a new z shell in a tab and run a command? - macos

I'm on macOS which is currently using the zshell.
I would like to run a command in one shell which opens another shell preferably in another tab in the same window and then runs a given command. For example:
> openTab
would open another tab and run a basic command like ls.
Is this possible to do?
It appears that the open command will open new window, but I want it to be opened as a new tab in the current window. See here
Osascript appears a bit messy, is there way to do this natively with zshell?

You can use AppleScript, via osascript to do exactly that:
function runInNewTab() {
osascript >/dev/null <<EOF
tell application "System Events"
tell process "Terminal" to keystroke "t" using command down
end tell
tell application "Terminal" to do script "$*" in front window
EOF
}
Run it like this:
runInNewTab ls -l ~

Related

OSX Terminal close current tab from command line without prompt?

Looking for a way to close the current tab via the command line, I hashed this out, but end up getting a prompt for Do you really want to close which I would like to avoid. Here's my code,
osascript -e 'tell application "System Events" to tell process "Terminal" to keystroke "w" using command down'
Why didn't use the:
Terminal.app -> Preferences -> Settings -> Shell
and for the items:
"When the shell exists:" Close if the shell exited cleanly
"Prompt before closing:" Only if there are...." (or Never)

AppleScript: Put text in Terminal ONLY (no execution)

I am using AppleScript to launch a certain python script. This python script uses arguments. I know how to use do script to launch commands but this time I just want to have python myscript.py ready. After that I would type my own argument and hit RETURN.
I don't know how to put the text in Terminal. Arguments will be different everytime I want to use the script, otherwise I would just use do script.
This will type your command into the current active terminal window:
tell application "Terminal" to activate
tell application "System Events" to keystroke "python myscript.py "
If you need to select which terminal window, then there will be a bit more work to do.

Mac: gnome-terminal equivalent for shell script

I am trying to run a shell script in a MAC terminal. I want to open a new terminal window that will execute the script separate from the program that is running. In Fedora, there is a gnome-terminal command which lets me execute a script in another terminal shell.
Does anyone know an equivalent on MAX OSX and how to use it?
For example say I have a script crazy.sh and I want to call this from a program that is executing but in a separate terminal from the one which is currently executing the program.
I like DigitalTrauma's answer but I found for my use, this worked better
open -a Terminal.app crazy.sh
Thanks for the answers.
One way to do it is to use an xterm instead of a terminal window:
xterm -e crazy.sh
If you want the xterm to stay open after the script completes, use the -hold option to xterm.
But if you really need to do this in a terminal, you can do it with applescript:
tell application "Terminal"
activate
tell application "System Events" to keystroke "n" using command down
repeat while contents of selected tab of window 1 starts with linefeed
delay 0.1
end repeat
do script "crazy.sh" in window 1 -- make sure the path to your script is right
end tell
(Credit to the answer here https://superuser.com/questions/466619/open-new-terminal-tab-and-execute-script)

Applescript to open Terminal window without sourcing ~/.bash_profile

I am trying to use Platypus to create an app launcher for an interactive command-line program on OSX 10.8. I want to be able to double-click on my application, and have a Terminal window open, running my program. The problem is that my Applescript, (borrowed from Octave, and adapted for Julia) launches a Terminal window and attempts to spit some commands into it, however I have a rather hefty ~/.bash_profile that interferes with this. Is there a way to get my Applescript to open a non-login shell, or not source ~/.bash_profile, etc?
Here's the script that Platypus runs:
# This is the startup procedure written as AppleScript to open a
# Terminal.app (if the Terminal.app is not already running) and start
# the Julia program.
# 20071007 removed: open -a /Applications/Utilities/Terminal.app
osascript 2>&1>/dev/null <<EOF
tell application "System Events" to set ProcessList to get name of every process
tell application "Terminal"
activate
if (ProcessList contains "Terminal") or ((count of every window) is less than 1) then
tell application "System Events" to tell process "Terminal" to keystroke "n" using command down
end if
do script ("exec bash -c \"PATH=${ROOT}/julia/bin:${PATH} OPENBLAS_NUM_THREADS=1 FONTCONFIG_PATH=${ROOT}/julia/etc/fonts GIT_EXEC_PATH=${ROOT}/julia/libexec/git-core GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR=${ROOT}/julia/share/git-core exec '${ROOT}/julia/bin/julia'\"") in front window
end tell
EOF
# Quit the Julia.application immediately after startup (ie. quitting
# it in the taskbar) because once it is started it cannot be restarted
# a second time. If Julia.app stays (eg. because of a crash) opened
# then restarting is not possible.
osascript 2>&1>/dev/null <<EOF
tell application "julia"
quit
end tell
EOF
In general, you don't need a Terminal window to execute command line stuff. You would only use the Terminal if there was information you need to manually type in by hand. So you can probably just run the command using "do shell script" instead of "do script" in a Terminal window. Note that doing it this way won't use your bash profile file. So try this command all by itself in the applescript...
do shell script ("exec bash -c \"PATH=${ROOT}/julia/bin:${PATH} OPENBLAS_NUM_THREADS=1 FONTCONFIG_PATH=${ROOT}/julia/etc/fonts GIT_EXEC_PATH=${ROOT}/julia/libexec/git-core GIT_TEMPLATE_DIR=${ROOT}/julia/share/git-core exec '${ROOT}/julia/bin/julia'\"")
Then you can add your other applescript commands as needed, just don't use the Terminal and thus your bash profile won't be used.

open programs with applescript

2 part question:
I'm simply trying to run programs using applescript from the terminal, so I tried:
$ osascript tell application "iTunes" to activate
and get the error:
osascript: tell: No such file or directory
Giving the full path to the program did not work either. What am I missing? The second part of the question is what I eventually want to use applescript for. I would like to use it to open an application I built using py2app. Can applescript open any mac app or just certain ones that are already compatible.
Thanks
Try this. Notice you use "-e" when you are writing the command. Without "-e" you would give a path to an applescript to run. Also notice the string command must be in quotes.
osascript -e "tell application \"iTunes\" to activate"
And if you have a multi-line applescript you use "-e" before each line like this...
osascript -e "tell application \"iTunes\"" -e "activate" -e "end tell"
If you want to open an application just use the unix "open" command...
open "/path/to/application"
If you wanted to open an application using applescript and the "activate" command doesn't work (it should work for almost everything though) then tell the Finder to open it. Remember that applescript uses colon delimited paths...
osascript -e "tell application \"Finder\" to open file \"path:to:application\""
In a bash shell (like in Terminal), you can send multiple lines to osascript by using a "here document".
osascript -e "tell application \"iTunes\"" -e "activate" -e "end tell"
becomes
osascript <<EOF
tell application "iTunes"
activate
end tell
EOF
As an old-skool Unix hacker, I save these little snippets in my $HOME/bin directory and call them from the command line. Still learning the particulars, though.
Alan
an alternative to osascript:
open -a Calendar
close by:
pkill Calendar
Try:
do shell script "open /Applications/iTunes.app"
you need to put single quotes around the tell:
osascript -e 'tell app "iTunes" to activate'
otherwise you're defining a variable when you run -e
I'am new to script too.
I am confused to so I scan an essay named AppleScript Language Guide
and when I go through script commands items, I learn that if you want to activate an application in mac os with applescript editor you should type beneath code in your editor and then compile and run them! may this answer will help you, here's code:
// applescript editor code
----------
activate application "iTunes" line 1
----------
tell application "iTunes" to activate line 2

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