I thought it was common knowledge that JavaScript is replacing AppleScript.
On Apr 6, 2015, at 8:52 PM, Tom Robinson barefootg...@gmail.com wrote:
Source?
People have been saying that for years. AppleScript may not be a high
priority for Apple, but they diligently keep it running
AppleScript is really two things, the Apple Events system which allows
inter-application communication and the AppleScript language which allows
scripts to be written which send and receive Apple Events. JavaScript is
currently an alternative language in the Script Editor so anything which
Good morning folks,
I'll second the observations Fletcher just posted :-) and since
this thread has veered off-topic into general Mac territory, I
request that any further followups go to direct email (or a
suitable OS X forum).
Regards,
Patrick Woolsey
==
Bare Bones Software, Inc.
On 2015-04-05, at 18:41, Rich F beer...@gmail.com wrote:
AppleScirpt's days numbered.
Source?
People have been saying that for years. AppleScript may not be a high priority
for Apple, but they diligently keep it running despite the OS evolving (e.g.
sandboxing), and there's always a few
AppleScirpt's days numbered.
On Saturday, April 4, 2015 at 12:02:06 AM UTC-4, Christopher Stone wrote:
On Apr 02, 2015, at 19:15, Amandeep Jawa deepa...@gmail.com javascript:
wrote:
This new arrangement gives me less screen real estate on each file because
of the staggering.
I use BBEdit daily one of my most common uses is diffing several files at
once.*
Unfortunately, the new single window interface for file diffs is causing me
a problem. If I diff several files at once, I get a series of windows,
each placed down to the right of the one before each smaller
On Apr 02, 2015, at 19:15, Amandeep Jawa deepasau...@gmail.com wrote:
This new arrangement gives me less screen real estate on each file because of
the staggering.
__
Hey There,
BBEdit is not good about placing windows