On Mar 7, 2006, at 8:05 PM, Charles Hartman wrote: > How do I execute a Mac application from the Terminal command line?
For most apps, simply type 'open <name of app>', including any necessary pathing. Keep in mind that Cocoa apps are actually bundles, which means that the file name usually has .app at the end. For example, to open Safari from the Terminal, type: open /Applications/ Safari.app/ > Specifically, I'm trying to specify BBEdit in the EDITOR environment > variable which is consulted by IPython. EDITOR= what? Not / > Applications/BBEdit, or /Applications/BBEdit.app. Probably something > that continues with /Contents/ . . . but then I get lost. And I don't > quite know how to experiment because I'm not sure how to attempt to > run it from the bash prompt . . . This is even easier! BBEdit has a command-line tool that you can install from the 'Tools' section of the preferences. The tool's name is 'bbedit' (lower case), so from the Terminal you can simply type 'bbedit myfile', and 'myfile' will be opened up in BBEdit. For your environmental variable, just set: EDITOR=bbedit -- Ed Leafe -- http://leafe.com -- http://dabodev.com _______________________________________________ Pythonmac-SIG maillist - Pythonmac-SIG@python.org http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/pythonmac-sig