I've made another patch to GetBundles that lets you set the "FINDER_APP" env variable, so you can tell GetBundles to open w/ Path Finder. If the var isn't set, it defaults back to Finder.
As an additional, unrelated suggestion, I find it much easier to parse bundle update times if the full 4-digit year is displayed: locCom += " date: " + Time.parse(bundle['revision']).getutc.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M") (Change the lowercase %y to the uppercase %Y.)
Thanks, Adam Vandenberg http://adamv.com/ http://github.com/adamv/
On 25.03.2009, at 01:26, Adam Vandenberg wrote:
I've made another patch to GetBundles that lets you set the "FINDER_APP" env variable, so you can tell GetBundles to open w/ Path Finder. If the var isn't set, it defaults back to Finder.
I had the same idea after trying out Path Finder which is a nice piece of software. I've just committed your patches to the repo. Thanks!
As an additional, unrelated suggestion, I find it much easier to parse bundle update times if the full 4-digit year is displayed: locCom += " date: " + Time.parse(bundle['revision']).getutc.strftime("%Y-%m-%d %H:%M")
Hmm, I used the short version due to the available space in the NIB. But maybe one could introduce a shell variable to let the user set his/ her favourite date format e.g.: TM_GETBUNDLES_DATE_FORMAT = %d.%m.%Y %H:%M
Cheers,
--Hans
I changed the name for the shell variable FINDER_APP to TM_GETBUNDLES_REVEAL_BUNDLE_IN to make it clear which bundle/app makes usage of it since there's is no system-wide shell variable given. [TM's naming convention]
--Hans