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Re: System Events scripting of Finder window
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Re: System Events scripting of Finder window


  • Subject: Re: System Events scripting of Finder window
  • From: kai <email@hidden>
  • Date: Mon, 19 Mar 2007 02:40:38 +0000


On 18 Mar 2007, at 01:14, Doug McNutt wrote:

-- This, from kai, also works. His names were different from mine probably because I'm stuck at 10.3.9. It's interesting to note that "Arrange" is either menu item 5 or 6 depending on starting at 0 or 1 for the count from the top of the GUI pull down menu. I see no way it can be 7, but it does work that way in the script above.

The count is being thrown by a couple of contextual menu items, Doug.

The first 3 items relate to the icons/list/column options, while item 4 is a menu item separator. Depending on Finder's selection status, menu item 5 might be named something like "Clean Up" or "Clean Up Selection". However, from a GUI scripting perspective, *both* items are listed - so they actually take up positions 5 and 6. Since menu item "Arrange" (or, in Tiger, "Arrange By") occurs next, it occupies position 7.

To demonstrate this, try running the following short script:

----------------

tell application "System Events" to set {l, p} to ¬
	{name, position} of menu items of menu 1 of ¬
	menu bar item 5 of menu bar 1 of process "Finder"

tell l to repeat with i from 1 to count
	if item i is missing value then
		set item i to (i as string) & tab & "——————"
	else if p's item i is missing value then
		set item i to (i as string) & "*" & tab & item i
	else
		set item i to (i as string) & tab & item i
	end if
end repeat

"Any item marked * is currently hidden:"
choose from list l with prompt result ¬
	with empty selection allowed

----------------

I believe the AXRaise and frontmost commands are equivalent.

Applications and processes typically have a frontmost property, while UI elements that might respond to a <perform action "AXRaise"> command include windows and scroll areas.


So either Finder or System Events could be used to make Finder the frontmost application/process, and to also bring a specific window to the front. In terms of effect, the following variants might therefore be considered equivalent:

----------------

tell application "Finder"
	activate
	activate window "xyz" (* may not work in other applications *)
end tell

----------------

tell application "System Events" to tell process "Finder"
	set frontmost to true
	perform action "AXRaise" of window "xyz"
end tell

----------------

At 08:25 -0400 3/17/07, David Marshall wrote:
Try calling it menu bar 1.
Well taken. It shows as menu bar "" in the examiner. Sigh. I did try putting the quoted null in.

I find that it sometimes helps to test such things using a short script:

----------------
tell application "System Events" to process "Finder"'s menu bars
--> {menu bar 1 of application process "Finder" of application "System Events"}
----------------


Where possible, UI elements are normally referenced by name. So if any are referenced by index, chances are that they have no name:

----------------
tell application "System Events" to name of process "Finder"'s menu bars
--> {missing value}
----------------

The following script may help initially in identifying menu references. However, if anyone's likely to do this kind of thing on a more serious/regular basis, then it might be worth considering Bill's advice about PreFab UI Browser.

----------------

property default_ref : "Index"

to choose_item for t from l
	set r to choose from list l's every Unicode text ¬
		with prompt "Choose the required " & t & ":"
	if r is false then error number -128
	r's beginning
end choose_item

to get_index for t from l
	set r to choose_item for t from l
	tell l to repeat with i from 1 to count
		if item i is r then return i
	end repeat
end get_index

tell application "System Events" to tell process (my (choose_item for "process" from ¬
name of processes where it is not background only)) to tell menu bar 1
set r to a reference to menu bar item (my (get_index for ¬
"menu bar item" from name of menu bar items))
repeat while exists r's menu 1
tell r's menu 1 to set r to a reference to menu item (my ¬
(get_index for "menu item" from name of menu items))
end repeat
end tell


set default_ref to button returned of (display dialog ¬
	"Reference selected menu item by name or index?" buttons ¬
	{"Cancel", "Name", "Index"} default button default_ref with icon 1)

if default_ref is "Index" then return r
r's contents

----------------

---
kai


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 >Re: System Events scripting of Finder window (From: Doug McNutt <email@hidden>)

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