_mk_ Posted November 3, 2013 Share Posted November 3, 2013 (edited) Mavericks Tags - File and Email Tagging with Alfred 2 Features Show tags of a file/folder or email Add/Remove tags of a file/folder or email Search files/folders or emails with a specific tag Show list of available tags Installation Download and import into Alfred 2. Usage File Action The Mavericks Tags workflow is available as Alfred File Action: Hotkeys ⌃⌥T - Show tags of selected file in Finder ⌃⌥M - Show tags of selected email in Apple Mail Select "Add Tag" and ENTER a tag name to add it as new tag to the file/folder/email or select one of the existing tags and press ENTER to remove the selected tag from the file/folder/email. Keywords .tagged [tag name] - Search files/folder with tag .taggedmail [tag name] - Search emails with tag .taglist [tag name] - Show list of all available tags Credits Credit for the included command line utility go to jdberry. The icons are from the Windows8/Metro Icon Pack by Visual Pharm. Changes 1.4 [2014-03-01]"Manage Tags" file action now supports multiple file from Alfred's file buffer 1.3 [2013-12-16]".taglist" command now uses mdfind to query all tags instead of the unreliable Finder plist 1.2 [2013-12-10]new keyword ".taglist" to show list of all available tags renamed ".mtagged" keyword to ".taggedmail" 1.1 [2013-11-25]support for tagging emails chnaged icons Edited March 1, 2014 by _mk_ mixterdee, thec13, kopischke and 4 others 7 Link to comment
michaelw90 Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 Hey _mk_, This is a great idea, however I cannot seem to be able to tag any files or folders. I can search for tags just fine, but whenever I try to tag a file, a notification comes up saying: "terminating app due to uncaught exception...". Link to comment
kopischke Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 (edited) This is a nifty workflow – I noticed the utility a few days ago and have wondered if implementing a workflow based on it would make sense. This one is feature complete and well done, kudos: if you want tag management from the Alfred file browser, go for it, by all means. However, and without wanting to denigrate the workflow, if all you need is a keyboard interface to tag management, I would suggest simply defining a hotkey for the Tags … command in System Preferences (hat tip to Brett Terpstra for the idea). It’s lightweight and integrated, and will offer autocomplete suggestions among other things. Also, the workflow search is for user tags only – if you want and / or need to also search application specific tags like those set by Delicious Library, Evernote and others (aka Spotlight keywords – when Apple fixes CoreData Spotlight importing on Mavericks, that is), you might want to use a workflow based on an Alfred file filter (like my Tagg’d – sorry for the plug, really). The speed advantage James Berry’s utility claims over mdfind is entirely lost when using a workflow [EDIT: I didn’t pay attention: the workflow already uses a file filter] you will have to add kMDItemKeywords to the scope of its .tagged file filter, optionally also kMDItemOMUserTags for OpenMeta tags (essentially recreating my Tagg’d workflow). Again, kudos for the workflow. Please consider the above a set of differentiating footnotes, not a fundamental critique. Edited November 4, 2013 by kopischke Link to comment
_mk_ Posted November 4, 2013 Author Share Posted November 4, 2013 Hey _mk_, This is a great idea, however I cannot seem to be able to tag any files or folders. I can search for tags just fine, but whenever I try to tag a file, a notification comes up saying: "terminating app due to uncaught exception...". Make sure to invoke the workflow either from Alfred file browser or with a hotkey to grab the Finder selection. I'll have to add some error handling in the next version. Link to comment
_mk_ Posted November 4, 2013 Author Share Posted November 4, 2013 This is a nifty workflow – I noticed the utility a few days ago and have wondered if implementing a workflow based on it would make sense. This one is feature complete and well done, kudos: if you want tag management from the Alfred file browser, go for it, by all means. However, and without wanting to denigrate the workflow, if all you need is a keyboard interface to tag management, I would suggest simply defining a hotkey for the Tags … command in System Preferences (hat tip to Brett Terpstra for the idea). It’s lightweight and integrated, and will offer autocomplete suggestions among other things. Also, the workflow search is for user tags only – if you want and / or need to also search application specific tags like those set by Delicious Library, Evernote and others (aka Spotlight keywords – when Apple fixes CoreData Spotlight importing on Mavericks, that is), you might want to use a workflow based on an Alfred file filter (like my Tagg’d – sorry for the plug, really). The speed advantage James Berry’s utility claims over mdfind is entirely lost when using a workflow. Again, kudos for the workflow. Please consider the above a set of differentiating footnotes, not a fundamental critique. I do not treat your feedback as criticism ... don't worry. If one uses Finder to tag files, Brett's hotkey tip may be the best solution. But if one (like me) uses Alfred for most of the stuff, the workflow should come in handy. I also have a few more features in mind to make it even more useful. I also use a File Filter to display tagged files instead of the cli utility. I just omitted OpenMeta tags, as they are already very well covered by your workflow. I usually do not like to reinvent the wheel... Link to comment
kopischke Posted November 4, 2013 Share Posted November 4, 2013 I also use a File Filter to display tagged files instead of the cli utility. I just omitted OpenMeta tags, as they are already very well covered by your workflow. I usually do not like to reinvent the wheel... Hah, looks like I jumped to conclusions when checking out your workflow, I assumed you were using the cli’s search functionality for the filter. With a file filter, adding application tags would just involve adding kMDItemKeywords to the queried fields, of course. Well done . Also, only ever so slightly OT: noticed this already? Link to comment
_mk_ Posted November 5, 2013 Author Share Posted November 5, 2013 ...Also, only ever so slightly OT: noticed this already? German translations are almost always dubious if not misleading. I therefore switched my Mac's GUI language to English long time ago. Link to comment
deanishe Posted November 5, 2013 Share Posted November 5, 2013 (edited) Apple's German translations are horrific. Windows in German is just fine (other than being Windows), but OS X in German is demented. Ablage vs Datei or Sichern vs Speichern are kinda okay, but they've done some really insane things. On the iPhone, "Aktualisierungen" spread across, like, three buttons in the App Store app, and the "kostenlos" button in the iTunes app made it impossible to see the title of the podcast/track you were looking at. I'm sure there are much better (worse?) examples. My favourite was Flash's translations of "level" and "layer" (very different things in Flash). Both "Ebene" in German. Bravo! My favourite non-IT translation that I've come across was for the "hydraulic ram" on a large machine tool. Hydraulischer Widder. Epic! (For non German-speakers, "hydraulischer Widder" means "hydraulic male goat".) Edited November 5, 2013 by deanishe Link to comment
kopischke Posted November 5, 2013 Share Posted November 5, 2013 (edited) German translations are almost always dubious if not misleading. I therefore switched my Mac's GUI language to English long time ago. Apple's German translations are horrific. Windows in German is just fine (other than being Windows), but OS X in German is demented. Ablage vs Datei or Sichern vs Speichern are kinda okay, but they've done some really insane things. On the iPhone, "Aktualisierungen" spread across, like, three buttons in the App Store app, and the "kostenlos" button in the iTunes app made it impossible to see the title of the podcast/track you were looking at. I'm sure there are much better (worse?) examples. My favourite was Flash's translations of "level" and "layer" (very different things in Flash). Both "Ebene" in German. Bravo! My favourite non-IT translation that I've come across was for the "hydraulic ram" on a large machine tool. Hydraulischer Widder. Epic! (For non German-speakers, "hydraulischer Widder" means "hydraulic male goat".) Well, I keep hoping … and, in the meantime, filing localization related radars . Edited November 5, 2013 by kopischke Link to comment
deanishe Posted November 5, 2013 Share Posted November 5, 2013 Those are truly insane translations. I have to look up my own post about this [https://alpha.app.net/kopischke/post/13535521] each time I want to use one of them and I am a native German speaker generally considered to have a pretty good vocabulary and more than decent grasp of the finer points of my language. To give you an idea of how confusing this is: imagine you had called tags ›key words‹ (with a space) in the English version. I'm not surprised. "Worte" and "Wörter" have clearly distinct meanings that have nothing to do with tags or keywords. It should confuse the hell out of anyone that understands the difference. "Key words" vs "keywords" doesn't really capture the total dumbness of the mistake. I'm not sure you can in English. Tags are Tags. Why does Apple always have to come up with a different, wrong translation for everything? Link to comment
deanishe Posted November 5, 2013 Share Posted November 5, 2013 I didn't know about bugreport.apple.com. I just filed a bug re Apple Maps and the city where I live, Essen. Every single business gets a restaurant icon, even the local prison (For non German-speakers, Essen is both a (fairly large) city and German for "food".) Link to comment
Januz Posted November 6, 2013 Share Posted November 6, 2013 The workflow looks interesting. Will it autocomplete tags while they are typed? Link to comment
kopischke Posted November 6, 2013 Share Posted November 6, 2013 (edited) I didn't know about bugreport.apple.com. I just filed a bug re Apple Maps and the city where I live, Essen. Yeah, it’s meant to be a dev tool, but it’s accessible to anybody with a free developer account, not just paid members of the iOS and OS X programs. The openradar mirror exists because the bug reports are only visible to the submitter, which makes it rather difficult to assess if the issue has already been noticed by others, and what patterns they have noticed… Every single business [in Essen] gets a restaurant icon, even the local prison *mind blown Edited November 6, 2013 by kopischke Link to comment
kopischke Posted November 6, 2013 Share Posted November 6, 2013 Those are truly insane translations. I'm not surprised. "Worte" and "Wörter" have clearly distinct meanings that have nothing to do with tags or keywords. It should confuse the hell out of anyone that understands the difference. "Key words" vs "keywords" doesn't really capture the total dumbness of the mistake. I'm not sure you can in English. Tags are Tags. Why does Apple always have to come up with a different, wrong translation for everything? Well, actually, “Schlagworte” has a tradition in indexing contexts (albeit not computer based ones), so that wouldn’t have been too bad a a choice for either term, but not for both (and differentiating by subverting German grammar is … umh [to English speakers: it’s a bit as if keywords and tags were called, respectively, “keywords” and “keywordz”]). Link to comment
deanishe Posted November 6, 2013 Share Posted November 6, 2013 (edited) "keywordz". I like that. It's definitely better than mine. BTW: Should I also file my bug report on openradar, then? Edited November 6, 2013 by deanishe Link to comment
kopischke Posted November 8, 2013 Share Posted November 8, 2013 "keywordz". I like that. It's definitely better than mine. BTW: Should I also file my bug report on openradar, then? Duplicating a bug report on Open radar is always good. Link to comment
trokotech Posted November 19, 2013 Share Posted November 19, 2013 It is not working for me. Please, have a look to log: 2013-11-19 12:21:12.479 tag[13340:507] *** Terminating app due to uncaught exception 'NSInvalidArgumentException', reason: '*** -[__NSArrayM insertObject:atIndex:]: object cannot be nil' *** First throw call stack: ( 0 CoreFoundation 0x00007fff910c841c __exceptionPreprocess + 172 1 libobjc.A.dylib 0x00007fff96734e75 objc_exception_throw + 43 2 CoreFoundation 0x00007fff90f898b7 -[__NSArrayM insertObject:atIndex:] + 951 3 tag 0x00000001075b209c tag + 4252 4 tag 0x00000001075b4195 tag + 12693 5 libdyld.dylib 0x00007fff909f55fd start + 1 ) libc++abi.dylib: terminating with uncaught exception of type NSException Link to comment
_mk_ Posted December 8, 2013 Author Share Posted December 8, 2013 The workflow was updated to version 1.1: New Features: tag multiple files at once add multiple tags at once (separated by comma: tag1,tag2,tag3) tag email in Apple Mail Link to comment
Martin Posted December 9, 2013 Share Posted December 9, 2013 Thanks for the update, is there any way to make a Smart Folder in Mail.app based on tags? Link to comment
_mk_ Posted December 10, 2013 Author Share Posted December 10, 2013 Thanks for the update, is there any way to make a Smart Folder in Mail.app based on tags? No, unfortunately not. But you could create a Smart Folder in Finder or use spotlight: tag:<tagname> kind:mail You can avoid the tag: prefix but I usually keep it for better visualization. Link to comment
_mk_ Posted December 10, 2013 Author Share Posted December 10, 2013 The workflow was updated to version 1.2: New Features: new keyword ".taglist" to show all available tags Link to comment
ctwise Posted December 11, 2013 Share Posted December 11, 2013 The workflow was updated to version 1.2: New Features: new keyword ".taglist" to show all available tags I applaud your ingenuity in using the Finder prefs to find all the tags, but that doesn't list all the tags on the system. It's a subset. Link to comment
_mk_ Posted December 11, 2013 Author Share Posted December 11, 2013 (edited) I applaud your ingenuity in using the Finder prefs to find all the tags, but that doesn't list all the tags on the system. It's a subset. This uses the view settings of the tags shown by "All Tags" in Finder. Not sure if there is a "critical mass" that stops Finder from storing the tags in its prefs. Haven't found any other way until now. Suggestions are welcome. Edited December 11, 2013 by _mk_ Link to comment
ctwise Posted December 11, 2013 Share Posted December 11, 2013 This uses the view settings of the tags shown by "All Tags" in Finder. Not sure if there is a "critical mass" that stops Finder from storing the tags in its prefs. Haven't found any other way until now. Suggestions are welcome. I wish I had a suggestion as well. :-) I was looking for exactly this a while back and the only reliable way I found was to brute force it, extracting tags out of every tagged file then collating the results. Obviously Finder has a way to get that list, so somebody needs to trace Finder and see where it's pulling that list from. Link to comment
_mk_ Posted December 11, 2013 Author Share Posted December 11, 2013 I checked with fseventer and the only file that gets modified when I create a new / rename an existing tag is ~/Preferences/com.apple.finder.plist. That's the one I parse for the tag list. So either fseventer misses some "special" system files that get modified or Apple uses another fancy technique to gather all tags in Finder. This really drives me nuts. On the one hand I am so happy that Apple finally jumped on the tagging train but on the other hand I am quite disappointed by how incomplete this new feature was delivered. There is no official CLI, no AppleScript support,... Link to comment
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