From newspapers to NASA, Mac users around the world use AppleScript to automate their daily computing routines. Famed for its similarity to English and its ease of integration with other programs, AppleScript is the perfect programming language for time-squeezed Mac fans. As beginners quickly realize, however, AppleScript has one major shortcoming: it comes without a manual.No more. You don't need a degree in computer science, a fancy system administrator title, or even a pocket protector and pair of nerdy glasses to learn the Mac's most popular scripting language; you just need the proper guide at your side. AppleScript: The Missing Manual is that guide.Brilliantly compiled by author Adam Goldstein, AppleScript: The Missing Manual is brimming with useful examples. You'll learn how to clean up your Desktop with a single click, for example, and how to automatically optimize pictures for a website. Along the way, you ll learn the overall grammar of AppleScript, so you can write your own customized scripts when you feel the need.Naturally, AppleScript: The Missing Manual isn't merely for the uninitiated scripter. While its hands-on approach certainly keeps novices from feeling intimidated, this comprehensive guide is also suited for system administrators, web and graphics professionals, musicians, scientists, mathematicians, engineers, and others who need to learn the ins and outs of AppleScript for their daily work.Thanks to AppleScript: The Missing Manual , the path from consumer to seasoned script has never been clearer. Now you, too, can automate your Macintosh in no time.
Product Identifiers
Publisher
O'reilly, Incorporated
ISBN-10
0596008503
ISBN-13
9780596008505
eBay Product ID (ePID)
44775971
Product Key Features
Author
ADAM Goldstein
Publication Name
Applescript: the Missing Manual : the Missing Manual
Format
Trade Paperback
Language
English
Series
Missing Manual Ser.
Publication Year
2005
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
352 Pages
Dimensions
Item Length
9.2in
Item Height
0.9in
Item Width
7in
Item Weight
20.2 Oz
Additional Product Features
Lc Classification Number
Qa76.73.A67
Table of Content
The Missing Credits; About the Author; About the Creative Team; Acknowledgments; The Missing Manual Series;Foreword;Introduction; Uses for AppleScript; Advantages and Disadvantages; About This Book;Part I: AppleScript Overview; Chapter 1: Setting Up AppleScript; 1.1 The Script Menu; 1.2 Working with the Scripts You Have; Chapter 2: Using Script Editor; 2.1 The Script Editor Look; 2.2 Script Formats; 2.3 Setting Script Editor's Preferences; Chapter 3: Building a Script from Scratch; 3.1 Getting Started; 3.2 Commanding Other Programs;Part II: Everyday Scripting Tasks; Chapter 4: Manipulating Text; 4.1 String Notation; 4.2 Getting Text Back from Dialog Boxes; 4.3 Linking Strings Together; 4.4 Multiline Strings; 4.5 Scripting TextEdit; 4.6 Adding Word Count; 4.7 Commanding Microsoft Word; 4.8 Running Scripts from Text; Chapter 5: Controlling Files; 5.1 File Path Boot Camp; 5.2 Displaying Folders; 5.3 Moving Files Around; 5.4 Backing Up Files; 5.5 Deleting Files; 5.6 Picking a File from a Dialog Box; 5.7 Saving Files; Chapter 6: Creating Lists; 6.1 Common List Commands; 6.2 Displaying Lists; 6.3 The Ever-Useful every Keyword; 6.4 List Processing; 6.5 Joining Lists Together; 6.6 Inputting Lists; 6.7 Getting Lists from Other Programs; Chapter 7: Organizing and Editing Graphics; 7.1 Scripting iPhoto; 7.2 Controlling Photoshop; 7.3 Image Events; Chapter 8: Playing Sound and Video; 8.1 Scripting iTunes; 8.2 Speaking and Listening; 8.3 Scripting QuickTime; Chapter 9: Internet and Network Scripting; 9.1 Internet Connect; 9.2 Safari; 9.3 Address Book; 9.4 Mail; 9.5 iChat Control; 9.6 URL Access Scripting; 9.7 Recalling Passwords; Chapter 10: Organizing Information in Databases; 10.1 Record Notation; 10.2 Making a Simple AppleScript Database; 10.3 Getting File Information; 10.4 Scripting FileMaker Pro;Part III: Power-User Features; Chapter 11: Linking Scripts to Folders with Folder Actions; 11.1 Enabling Folder Actions; 11.2 Built-in Actions; 11.3 Running Your Own Actions; Chapter 12: Scripting Programs That Don't Have Dictionaries; 12.1 Enabling GUI Scripting; 12.2 GUI Scripting Basics; 12.3 Controlling Menus; 12.4 Clicking Buttons; 12.5 Deciphering Interface Hierarchies; 12.6 Fake Typing; Chapter 13: Mixing AppleScript and Unix; 13.1 Terminal; 13.2 Unix Without Terminal; 13.3 Running Superuser Commands; 13.4 Running AppleScripts from Unix; 13.5 Scheduling AppleScript Commands; Chapter 14: Testing and Debugging Scripts; 14.1 First Line of Defense: The Compiler; 14.2 Noting Important Events; 14.3 Preventing Errors; 14.4 Isolating and Handling Errors; 14.5 The Xcode Debugger; Chapter 15: AppleScript Studio; 15.1 What Is AppleScript Studio?; 15.2 Making a Program;Part IV: Appendixes; Appendix A: AppleScript Support in Common Programs; A.1 Databases; A.2 Email Programs; A.3 Graphics Editors; A.4 Page Layout Programs; A.5 Plain Text Editors; A.6 Word Processors; A.7 Web Browsers; Appendix B: Moving from HyperCard to AppleScript; B.1 Data Types; B.2 Dialog Boxes; B.3 Existence; B.4 Numbers; B.5 Pausing; B.6 Ranges; B.7 Repeat Statements; B.8 Subroutines; B.9 Variables; Appendix C: Where to Go from Here; C.1 Web Sites; C.2 Discussion Lists; C.3 Books;Colophon;
Copyright Date
2005
Target Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Topic
Operating Systems / Apple (Mac OS & iOS), General, Hardware / Personal Computers / Macintosh, Desktop Applications / Word Processing
Lccn
2005-299050
Dewey Decimal
005.43
Dewey Edition
22
Illustrated
Yes
Genre
Computers
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