First up, I realise that Automator does so much more than Shortcuts. But my question is: why?
I have a couple of spreadsheets that I want to be reminded of once a week so I can keep an eye on the dates they contain. My stupid ADHD brain is likely to forget to check them, and a reminder is only as useful as whether I’m able to act on it at that moment in time. So I’ve set up an automation to open them up at a specific time. Given that Shortcuts on macOS doesn’t support automations (as far as I can tell), the only way to do this is;
-
Create a shortcut that will open the documents I need to open.
-
Create an automator application that uses a bash script to open the shortcut.
-
Create a calendar entry where the alert is set to open the automator app.
So I guess I want to know why Shortcuts (for macOS) can’t run automations, why Calendar can’t open Shortcuts, and why Shortcuts didn’t subsume everything that Automator can do? Who at Apple thought it was perfectly right and proper to have to distinct and powerful apps essentially offering the same functions, but that neither of them fully encompass the abilities of the other?
Well, Shortcuts comes from the iOS world and is a relatively recent addition to macOS. Automator originated in macOS and I don’t think it has made it over to iOS at this point?
That’s not even the full extent of it though. Before Automator, there was Script Editor, which could also create script applications, but that doesn’t seem to work so well anymore. Automator has become the preferred approach for that. But Script Editor is still around and is useful for looking up AppleScript dictionaries. These tell you if a given application offers special scripting support, and there are also a few general dictionaries like StandardAdditions that are worth a gander. I wish AppleScript existed for iOS.
And then there’s the command line approach of using
crontab
to open your files with theopen
command. Andosascript
lets you run any AppleScript from the command line.