![]() OR i suggest perhaps the people above are trying to watch a movie full screen using non-apple viewer. ![]() I suggest you are using the keyboard arrows or something (for pause or fast forward) incorrectly and are pressing the "log-out" key/mouse combination. ![]() check your "viewer" - it is likely NOT the same keys as iMovie or Preview uses (which may steal the keys for the purpose - blocking their normal log-out effect). coincidently i now can't remember the keystoke and keystroke/mouse combination - so i better go check! guess what? i believe the keys you are thinking are for "fast forward / pause" are the culprits. once i checked help for all ways to log-out, and refused to use them, it didn't happen again. I have mistakenly logged out several times by pressing "the log-out" keyboard combination. I've never had the problem of mystery logout in ANY situation except for the one i confirmed was my own fault □ the problem is not common to all apple users and likely just a few. It would be easy to use sdef, sdp and gen_bridge_metadata to dump the entire scriptable dictionary and script things using ruby from the command line, but at present, this is a non-starter.I dis-agree with all the above. If the App Store app ever exposes that function to scripting you will have more options from the command line. Once you have a working script, you can use the command line open command to kick it off. Here are two tutorials to get you started if this meets your needs. If someone is logged into the mac (windowmanager is running), you can use Automator and the "watch me do" function to automate updates and storing your store password in the script fairly insecurely. Unlike the overall software update, you can only script the process of clicking buttons with a mouse. There doesn't appear to be a command line helper or any scriptable cocoa classes you can latch on to for automation.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |