Hi. Is there a way to have a script search the user's computer for a given filename and return the path? Im using a Mac and JMP14.3 atm. I'm interested in creating an add-in that calls another script on the user's computer, but I won't know where the user has stored the script.
In the add-in, I'm thinking something like this:
//Add-in code path = [command or function to search for "myscript.jsl" on user's computer and return a path]; Include(path, New Context); //Things I've explored: //Not certain what the "search" option does, but seemed worth a go. //This only returns my default directory with "myscript.jsl" appended //(even though there is no such file in that location) path = ConvertFilePath("myscript.jsl", search); //There's also this, but same result as above: Set File Search Path("$HOME/"); path = ConvertFilePath("myscript.jsl", search); //As a last resort, I looked at this, thinking maybe if I could get a list of all files, //I could then search the list for myscript.jsl. Unfortunately I cannot get the "recursive" //option to work on my machine (Mac, JMP14.3). I imagine this would be a very slow method //though as there are 1000s of files in a typical user's home directory.
y = Files In Directory("$HOME", "recursive"); //Returns {}
y = Files In Directory("$HOME", "Recursive"); //Returns {}
y = Files In Directory("$HOME", recursive); //Returns {}
y = Files In Directory("$HOME", Recursive); //Returns {}
y = Files In Directory("$HOME", Recursive(1)); //Returns {}
//All options above just return {}. I'm curious if this is unique to my setup (Mac, JMP14.3).
Other than that, I'm out of ideas. Does anyone have any suggestions? Thanks.
If you need to search the whole drive you likely want to leverage any indexing the OS already did, which I think is possible using 'find' in the terminal.
find / -name abc.dmg
You could call this using Run Program. I am guessing at the file path for find and the syntax, but the call might look something like this:
Run Program(
Executable( "/usr/bin/find"),
options( {"/ -name abc.dmg"} )
);
Some other things to consider:
Thanks for the suggestion ih. I looked into this, but regret to say I'm not really knowledgeable enough on the Run Program command to make this work. At first glance, it appears to require an actual file in the "Executable" field, rather than just a string. This strays into unknown territory for me unfortunately.
I've created a wish list item that is related to this: Possible to have an add-in search for a script and run it?
I appreciated the questions at the end of your reply, and I tried to address those questions in this wishlist item post.
Thanks again for you help.