So I have a Hazel rule that says "If I see a statement from this company, do X" in this case I want X to do the following.
Open Evernote
Check to see if I have a note with the same title as the downloaded file's title.
If no, create a note from that file. If yes, do nothing.
So what I wrote so far is.
global fileNamez
tell application "Finder"
set fileNamez to name of theFile
tell application "Evernote"
activate
delay (3)
set searchString to "\"" & fileNamez & "\""
set matches to find notes searchString
if (not (matches exists)) then
display dialog "no matches"
create note title fileNamez from file theFile
end if
end tell
end tell
The problem is the searching, it does not work, and I don't know whats wrong with it. Anyone have any ideas?
Try:
tell application "Finder" to set fileNamez to name of theFile
if application "Evernote" is not running then
launch application "Evernote"
delay 3
end if
tell application "Evernote" to set matches to find notes fileNamez
if matches = {} then
tell application "Evernote" to set resultNote to create note from file theFile title fileNamez
tell application "SystemUIServer" to display dialog "no matches" buttons {"OK"}
end if
Related
I have a script that downloads a report from an online service, waits a specified amount of time e.g. 30secs for the file to actually download and then renames the file. The script then repeats
What I would like to do is instead of putting a static delay in the script, to create a trigger that looks for the new file and once it appears triggers the renaming portion of the script.
The downloaded file name is constant.
The current portion of the script looks like this
`
tell application "Finder" to activate
tell application "System Events"
delay Wait_Time
key code 125
tell application "Finder"
set name of (selection as alias) to (the clipboard)
end tell
end tell
ultimately what I would like is to replace the delay Wait_Time with a something like:
repeat until file name found
Search Folder for "file name"
end repeat
select new file
rename new file to clipboard
obviously this wont work but it kind of captures my logic.
I have also tried a few other possible solutions but Im new to AppleScript and not overly confident that these approaches are suitable for my application.
The below is an example of a solution I have tried. This is just an example and im not sure if this particular code can even get me to where I need to be. I thought I would include it to show just how lost I am.
set excludes to {"Folder", "Application"}
tell application "Finder"
set search_folder to folder "Macintosh HD:Users:XXXXXXXX:Library:CloudStorage:OneDrive-Flinders:Flinders Connect Stats:Source Stats:Cisco Finesse:Agent State Summary by Interval Report"
set foundItems to (every item in search_folder whose name contains "Agent State Summary by Interval Report" and kind is not in excludes) as alias list
if foundItems is {} then return
repeat with once from 1 to 100
try
if (count of foundItems) = 1 then
tell application "Finder" to activate
tell application "System Events"
key code 125
tell application "Finder"
set name of (selection as alias) to (the clipboard)
end tell
end tell
exit repeat
end if
end try
end repeat
return
end tell
Im sure you can see I have no idea what im doing.
Anyway any help would be awesome!
I have found a solution... if anyone has ideas for improvement please let me know.
tell application "Finder" to activate
tell application "System Events"
repeat until (exists (files of folder folderPath whose name contains "Agent State Summary by Interval Report"))
delay 1
end repeat
end tell
tell application "System Events"
key code 125
tell application "Finder"
set name of (selection as alias) to (the clipboard)
end tell
end tell
end repeat
say "Finished!"
display dialog "Completed"
The original solution was found here AppleScript: How to repeat a search for a file until it is found?
I want to open a document in the current tab in an external application (MacVim for example). Based on a StackOverflow answer I created an Automator service with following AppleScript code:
tell application "Xcode"
set current_document to last source document
set current_document_path to path of current_document
end tell
tell application "MacVim"
activate
open current_document_path
end tell
The issue is, that it opens the file from the first tab and not from the current tab. How can I get the path of the current tab?
Following workaround based on SO answer works for me.
As noted in the comment there: This works EXCEPT if you are using the Assistant editor - then you end up with whatever happens to be in the Standard Editor. – Lloyd Sargent but for me it's better than the first tab.
on run {input, parameters}
set current_document_path to ""
tell application "Xcode"
set last_word_in_main_window to (word -1 of (get name of window 1))
if (last_word_in_main_window is "Edited") then
display notification "Please save the current document and try again"
-- eventually we could automatically save the document when this becomes annoying
else
set current_document to document 1 whose name ends with last_word_in_main_window
set current_document_path to path of current_document
end if
end tell
tell application "MacVim"
if (current_document_path is not "") then
activate
open current_document_path
end if
end tell
return input
end run
try the following
tell application "Xcode"
set docs to source documents
if length of docs is less than 1 then
display dialog "for ....... I need at least 1 document"
return
end if
path of last item of source documents
end tell
Applescript newbie question again :) I am trying to create a small applescript that will allow me to select multiple items from a list of currently running applications and then quit those selected apps. Something like this works but rather than having to click on each dialog it would be much easier to chose from a list.
tell application "System Events"
repeat with p in every process
if background only of p is false then
display dialog "Would you like to quit " & name of p & "?" as string
end if
end repeat
end tell
Any and all help would be greatly appreciated!
Thanks!
Try this:
tell application "System Events"
set listOfProcesses to (name of every process where background only is false)
tell me to set selectedProcesses to choose from list listOfProcesses with multiple selections allowed
end tell
--The variable `selectedProcesses` will contain the list of selected items.
repeat with processName in selectedProcesses
do shell script "Killall " & quoted form of processName
end repeat
tell application "System Events"
set processList to get the name of every process whose background only is false
set processNameList to choose from list processList with prompt "Select process to quit" with multiple selections allowed
if the result is not false then
repeat with processName in processNameList
do shell script "Killall " & quoted form of processName
end repeat
end if
end tell
you can use this script which is much simpler
tell application "Finder"
get the name of every process whose visible is true
end tell
You can try this
tell application "System Events"
set AppName to name of every process whose background only is false
choose from list AppName OK button name "Ok" cancel button name "Cancel"
end
& (name of every process whose (name is "AppName") can be added to Michele Percich's and Parag Bafna's solutions to include specific menu bar applications by name.
tell application processName to quit can be used instead of do shell script "Killall " & quoted form of processName.
tell application "System Events"
set processList to ¬
(name of every process where background only is false) & ¬
(name of every process whose ¬
(name is "AppName") or ¬
(name is "AnotherAppName"))
tell me to set selectedProcesses to choose from list processList with prompt "Select process(es) to quit:" with multiple selections allowed
end tell
if the result is not false then
repeat with processName in selectedProcesses
tell application processName to quit
end repeat
end if
I wrote this following AppleScript code a few years back. I consider it to be a “Must Have” because I use it almost every single day.
This code will generate a list of Visible and Hidden application processes, allowing multiple items to be selected to kill their processes. The first items in the list will be visible application processes (not sorted alphabetically), then an empty list item (used to separate the visible from the hidden processes), and the remaining list items will be the hidden application processes (sorted alphabetically)
use framework "Foundation"
use scripting additions
property appsToKill : missing value
property NSArray : a reference to current application's NSArray
listAllAppProcesses()
activate
set killApp to (choose from list ¬
appsToKill with title "Choose The App To Kill" with prompt ¬
"Choose The App/Apps To Kill" & linefeed & linefeed ¬
& "The Empty List Item Separates The Visible From The Hidden Applications" OK button name ¬
"OK" cancel button name "CANCEL" with multiple selections allowed)
set pidList to {}
if killApp is not false then
tell application "System Events"
repeat with i from 1 to count of killApp
set thisItem to item i of killApp
tell application process thisItem
set thePID to unix id
set end of pidList to thePID
end tell
end repeat
end tell
else
return
end if
set text item delimiters to space
do shell script ({"kill -9", pidList} as text)
on listAllAppProcesses()
tell application "System Events"
set visibleAppsToKill to name of every application process ¬
where visible is true
set invisibleAppsToKill to name of every application process ¬
where visible is false
set aList to ((NSArray's arrayWithArray:invisibleAppsToKill)'s ¬
sortedArrayUsingSelector:"caseInsensitiveCompare:") as list
set appsToKill to visibleAppsToKill & "" & aList
end tell
end listAllAppProcesses
If you want it from Terminal, you can use a simple script like this quit.rb
The following example AppleScript code is pretty straight forward and will gracefully quit the selected application(s), providing the selected application(s) is (are) in a stable state:
tell application "System Events" to ¬
set appList to the name of ¬
every process whose visible is true
set quitAppList to ¬
choose from list appList ¬
with multiple selections allowed
repeat with thisApp in quitAppList
quit application thisApp
end repeat
When I present a list to choose from, I prefer to have it in alphabetical order and to that end I use a handler to first sort the list before presenting it:
on SortList(thisList)
set indexList to {}
set sortedList to {}
set theCount to (count thisList)
repeat theCount times
set lowItem to ""
repeat with i from 1 to theCount
if i is not in the indexList then
set thisItem to item i of thisList as text
if lowItem is "" then
set lowItem to thisItem
set lowItemIndex to i
else if thisItem comes before lowItem then
set lowItem to thisItem
set lowItemIndex to i
end if
end if
end repeat
set end of sortedList to lowItem
set end of indexList to lowItemIndex
end repeat
return the sortedList
end SortList
To use this with the first block of code presented I typically add handlers at the bottom of my code and then to use it, add the following example AppleScript code between the tell application "Finder" to ¬ and set quitAppList to ¬ statements:
set appList to SortList(appList)
Note: I acquired this particular handler somewhere on the Internet too many years ago to remember and unfortunately lost who to credit it to. My apologies to whomever you are.
What I try to do:
When I'm in one of my text editors (TextEdit, Byword, FoldingText) I want this AppleScript to display the file path.
I figured asking for the frontmost window app get's me the apps name nice and easily and then I can ask for the POSIX path in the next step.
The Problem:
The script is already 99% there, but I'm missing something. When I try to use the variable of activeApp it doesn't work and I get this error:
Error Number:System Events got an error: Can’t get application {"TextEdit"}.
-1728
Here's the script:
tell application "System Events"
set activeApp to name of application processes whose frontmost is true
--This doesn't work either:
--do shell script "php -r 'echo urldecode(\"" & activeApp & "\");'"
tell application activeApp
set myPath to POSIX path of (get file of front document)
end tell
display dialog myPath
end tell
If I exchange activeApp with "TextEdit" everything works. Help would be appreciated.
Maybe there's something in here that helps: Get process name from application name and vice versa, using Applescript
Either get the path property of a document or use System Events to get value of attribute "AXDocument":
try
tell application (path to frontmost application as text)
(path of document 1) as text
end tell
on error
try
tell application "System Events" to tell (process 1 where frontmost is true)
value of attribute "AXDocument" of window 1
end tell
do shell script "x=" & quoted form of result & "
x=${x/#file:\\/\\/}
x=${x/#localhost} # 10.8 and earlier
printf ${x//%/\\\\x}"
end try
end try
The first method didn't work with Preview, TextMate 2, Sublime Text, or iChm, and the second method didn't work with Acorn. The second method requires access for assistive devices to be enabled.
You are asking for...
set activeApp to name of application processes whose frontmost is true
Notice "processes", that's plural meaning you can get several processes in response so applescript gives you a list of names. Even though only one application is returned it's still in list format. Also see that your error contains {"TextEdit"}. The brackets around the name mean it's a list, so the error is showing you the problem.
You can't pass a list of names to the next line of code. As such you have a couple of choices. 1) you can ask for only 1 process instead of all processes. That will return a string instead of a list. Try this code...
set activeApp to name of first application process whose frontmost is true
2) you can work with the list by using "item 1 of the list". Try this code...
set activeApps to name of application processes whose frontmost is true
set activeApp to item 1 of activeApps
Finally, you shouldn't be telling system events to tell the application. Separate those 2 tell blocks of code. Here's how I would write your code.
tell application "System Events"
set activeApp to name of first application process whose frontmost is true
end tell
try
tell application activeApp
set myPath to POSIX path of (get file of front document)
end tell
tell me
activate
display dialog myPath
end tell
on error theError number errorNumber
tell me
activate
display dialog "There was an error: " & (errorNumber as text) & return & return & theError buttons {"OK"} default button 1 with icon stop
end tell
end try
I can't promise the "get file of front document" code will work. That depends on the application. Not all applications will understand that request. That's why I used a try block. In any case though you can be certain you are addressing the proper application. Good luck.
I've been using this snippet for a while, seems to work for all Cocoa apps (not sure about X11):
set front_app to (path to frontmost application as Unicode text)
tell application front_app
-- Your code here
end tell
None of this seems to work with a compiled AppleScript saved as an application and placed on the Dock. Whenever you run the application, IT is the frontmost, not the application that is showing its front window. That application becomes inactive as my Applescript runs. How do I write an Applescript application that isn't active when it runs?
I may have found a solution to the problem listed above. Just tell the user to reactivate the desired application, and give them time.
tell application "Finder"
activate
say "Click front window of your application"
delay 5
set myapp to get name of first application process whose frontmost is true
-- etc.
-- your code
end tell
I am trying to write an applescript script that resizes all open windows. In order to make sure that I'm getting to all the windows, I'm making my script say the name of the application as well as the number of open windows of that application.
Interestingly, while I hear the names of all my open applications, my script says that they all have 0 windows open. How can I fix this issue?
Here's my code:
tell application "System Events"
repeat with theProcess in (every process)
if background only of theProcess is false then
if name of theProcess is not "Finder" then
if name of theProcess is "Google Chrome" then
say "Chrome woo hoo"
say (count windows as string)
else
say name of theProcess as string
say (count windows as string)
tell theProcess
repeat with theWindow in windows
say "found a window of"
say (name of theProcess) as string
tell theWindow
click button 2
end tell
end repeat
end tell
end if
end if
end if
end repeat
end tell
I'm on Mac OS X 10.7.5, using automator 2.2.4 to write/run this applescript
You have to tell the process to count windows. After all it's the process that knows about its windows, not system events.
You have told the process to say its name e.g. "say name of theProcess as string" however you only use "say (count windows as string)"... no process is tied to that. Try "count windows of theProcess". Basically you have lines where sometimes you tell the process, other times you don't, and other times where you tell the process even though you've already told the process, so you do it twice. That's where you have "say (name of theProcess) as string" but that code is inside a "tell theProcess" block so it's already being told to theProcess.
Really you need to go through your code and be more precise. A tip... if you want to click a button in a window then the window must be frontmost on the screen otherwise you can't click it. Another tip... "name" is already a string so you don't need to coerce that to a string.
By the way, I agree with Michael Dautermann's comment to your post... there will be processes where you won't get access. But you'll find that out as you progress.
Here's how I would write your code. Basically I would get all of the variables at the beginning using a "tell theProcess" block. Then I can do stuff with those variables. I hope that helps. Notice that I only made the process frontmost which means if it has multiple windows open it will only click a button on the front window. You'll have to add code to make each window come to the front before you can click its button. Good luck.
tell application "System Events"
repeat with theProcess in processes
if not background only of theProcess then
tell theProcess
set processName to name
set theWindows to windows
end tell
set windowsCount to count of theWindows
if processName is "Google Chrome" then
say "Chrome woo hoo"
say windowsCount as text
else if processName is not "Finder" then
say processName
say windowsCount as text
if windowsCount is greater than 0 then
repeat with theWindow in theWindows
say "found a window of " & processName
tell theProcess
set frontmost to true
tell theWindow
click button 2
end tell
end tell
end repeat
end if
end if
end if
end repeat
end tell
I create a list of all open windows of visible applications on Mavericks like this:
tell application "System Events"
set this_info to {}
repeat with theProcess in (application processes where visible is true)
set this_info to this_info & (value of (first attribute whose name is "AXWindows") of theProcess)
end repeat
this_info -- display list in results window of AppleScript Editor
end tell
You need to allow any app using this to access the interface under Accessibility.