The plot thickens... (thanks to object.methods(true,true)
the alternative is now:
app.scriptPreferences.setUserInteractionLevel(somethingsomething)
What that somethingsomething should be , i have no idea yet
app.scriptPreferences.userInteractionLevel gives me 1699311169
Is there a way to get
Hi Greg,
that doesn't work alas...
but I googled your solution and found that app.methods(true,true) did work.
No idea what the two parameters are for.
Thx for the lead
Nimitz
2011/9/30 Gregory Clarke
> app.objc_methods should reveal the methods it's inherited thanks to
> Scripting Bridge.
app.objc_methods should reveal the methods it's inherited thanks to Scripting
Bridge.
Greg
On Sep 30, 2011, at 5:08 AM, Naughty Nimitz wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> As i am migrating from RubyCocoa (and the rb-appscript gem) to MacRuby I am
> charmed by Scripting Bridge: no gems required and supposedl
Cool, thanks again for your help and quick responses!
On Sep 29, 2011, at 9:39 PM, Mark Rada wrote:
I missed your question earlier. There is a very easy way to find out what
all the descriptions of all the menu extras are:
ui = Accessibility.application_with_bundle_identifier
>> 'com.apple.syst
Have you tried the macruby version of rb-appscript? I found it ran most of
scripts without any change. I was also initially attracted to scripting bridge
but had problems with it and subsequently read a few negative reports.
On 30 Sep 2011, at 13:08, Naughty Nimitz wrote:
> Hi all,
>
> As i
Hi all,
As i am migrating from RubyCocoa (and the rb-appscript gem) to MacRuby I am
charmed by Scripting Bridge: no gems required and supposedly easy to use.
Now my problem is how to migrate some statements: take this one in RubyCocoa
and appscript:
*
app("Adobe Indesign
CS5").script_preferences.