One of things I occasionally do at work is to grab every url for a client’s domains/sites and open them up to eyeball them and see if anything obvious needs fixing.
First I go and copy a list of all the active domains, and clean it up with a “search and replace” script. I end up with a list of url’s, one per line.
After that I copy it all and go over to the Terminal and run a nice little script which I call “tab”. My current default browser then starts sprouting tabs galore.
Here’s the script:
#!/bin/bash
pbpaste | tr "\r" "\n" | xargs -n 1 open
How does it work?
pbpaste provides the contents of the clipboard to the command line (see pbcopy to put things into the clipboard). tr translates characters, in this case from one kind of line end (or return character) to another. An issue with pbcopy from what I can tell! Then the cleaned up clipboard gets pushed to xargs which take the command -n 1 open
and builds one open per line of data being fed to it. Yes, xargs is very cool. The open command will then “open the URL in the default browser”.
I am sure this can all be done in Applescript or Automator.. but typing tab and return on the command line is the fastest and simplest for me!
If you want to use the script and are not sure how to take the shell code above and turn it into an actual script.. let me know and i’ll provide instructions (gee, another blog post!).