![]() ![]() Instead, this post is going to be presenting ideas and workflows for you to consider, leaving the building up to you.Īlright, enough preamble! Let’s get into the best Keyboard Maestro Macros for 2022. Most of these are pretty simple, and you’ll likely find that your method for making these work is better than what I can offer anyway. This is also why you won’t find tutorials or linked Macros in this post. I wanted to include plenty of Macros for you to choose from without feeling like they have no relevance to you. So when making this list, I wanted to strike a balance. There are a handful of “best of” lists out there for Keyboard Maestro, and if I’m being honest, I hardly ever walk away from them with any new Macros installed on my Mac.Īnd that’s because those Macros aren’t suited to my workflow! It’s tough to find a Macro that someone else made that is going to be useful for you. ![]() Now, it is a bit difficult to recommend Keyboard Maestro Macros to people since they are so personal. You can learn more about Keyboard Maestro in this post. It’s a lot like the Shortcuts app, except more technical and, in my opinion, much more useful. Specifically, we’re going to be covering the best Keyboard Maestro Macros for Mac users.įor those that don’t know, Keyboard Maestro is an app that allows you to create automated routines on your Mac. It’s going to take me a little time to get through all these and truly understand how they work but they are great.Today, we’re going to be discussing one of my favorite topics yet again: Automation. I see you have a tag of scratchx which I am guessing is scratch pad? I am not really using tags too much with nvALT but maybe I will. I took a look at your macros and was delighted to find two for nvALT which is a favorite of mine. I was really pleased with how it handles displaying some invoices I fed to it using the ‘layout’ option you suggested. So I dropped the man files in the /usr/share/man/man1 and /usr/share/man/man5 directories and tested it. So for example to find the path to the man page for the MacOS MANual I can type: I googled and found I could find out the path to any MAN (manual) document by typing: I am posting this so if someone else has problems they will know what to do. I am on 10.11.5 so the MAN path was perplexing and I think I have it figured out. I did find the correct directories but what stopped me when I first took a look at this was that I don’t have an /usr/local/man/ directory. Use ⇧ ⌘ G in a Finder window to bring up the Go-To-Folder sheet.Īnd the correct directory will open in the Finder window. The /user/local/… directories are invisible in the Finder. ![]() The xpdfbin 3.04 precompiled binaries are here: Read the INSTALL file in your favorite text editor and follow its instructions. ![]() The trailing dash is required if you want your output to go to the console – otherwise a new file will be written.Īlso to install Xpdf I assume I need to: make install? Quote the path with double or single quotes if it has ANY spaces in it. The basic syntax for pdftotext is: pdftotext -layout. It’s a fantastic little tool, and it’s the only such tool I know of that will attempt to preserve the layout of a PDF when it converts it (which makes parsing the resulting text much easier most of the time). There are nine useful tools, but the one I use most often is pdftotext. I have not run into Xpdf but am intrigued! Just double-click the Example Macros by ccs.kmmacros file, and it will import into its own group. Should I use “Import Macros” or “Import To Macro Libarary”? ![]()
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