Tim,
As to including the year, no need. Although I’m retired and often forget the
day of the week, I rarely forget what year it is.
Dave Carlson
Musician, Engineer, Farfar, Oregonian, Woodworker, and Pioneer
--
The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries
Tim,
Just made the change, and also learned a bit about the scripting language.
Again, thanks.
Dave Carlson
Engineer, Pioneer, Farfar, Woodworker, Musician, and Oregonian
--
The following information is important for all members of the Mac Visionaries
list.
If you have any questions or
Great information. This one goes into the Saved Mail folder.
Thanks Tim.
- Brad -
On Feb 3, 2020, at 10:59, 'Tim Kilburn' via MacVisionaries
wrote:
Hi,
Oops, the modified script I supplied does not say the year. If you do indeed
still want the year, I can fix that for you, or you can
Hi,
Oops, the modified script I supplied does not say the year. If you do indeed
still want the year, I can fix that for you, or you can experiment some
yourself to see if you can figure it out and where to place the argument.
Later...
Tim Kilburn
Jamf Certified Tech
Apple Teacher
(with
Tim,
Holey Moley, never would have figured out what string to put in there. All else
seems sensible, and of course not knowing I can’t edit an active script would
have messed me up for quite a while.
Thanks much for this.
Dave Carlson
Pioneer, Farfar, Oregonian, Woodworker, Engineer, and
Hi,
You'll need to first make a copy of the Script Editor file and place it on your
Desktop because you're not allowed to modify active scripts in this location.
• Open Macintosh HD, Library, Scripts, VoiceOver, Time of Day.applescript
• cmd-c to Copy.
• Bring focus to your Desktop, then press
When pressing Option+T an Apple script runs to announce the date and time. I
would like the date to announce the day of week, in addition to the month, day,
and year, followed by time. How do I edit the scripts to accomplish this?
Dave Carlson
Engineer, Pioneer, Farfar, Woodworker, Musician,