Create a symbolic link in the Mac OS X Finder
Sophia Terry
Is there a way to get the same functionality as the unix command ln -s in the Mac OS X Finder (OS 10.5)? I want to be able to create symbolic links while working in Finder windows without opening the Terminal.
Note that the Make Alias command in Finder is not what I want because those aliases cannot be navigated in the Terminal (but links created with ln -s can be navigated by both the Terminal and Finder).
9 Answers
What about thatcreating symbolic links in the Finder via AppleScript ?
Here's the most relevant script in that link:
on run open {choose file with prompt "Choose a file to create a symbolic link:" without invisibles}
end run
on open the_files repeat with i from 1 to (count the_files) try set posix_path to POSIX path of (item i of the_files) if posix_path ends with "/" then set posix_path to text 1 thru -2 of posix_path do shell script "ln -s " & quoted form of posix_path & " " & quoted form of (posix_path & ".sym") end try end repeat
end openJust paste it into AppleScript Editor and save it as an application. Then you can drag it over your finder's toolbar or link it on the dock.
2SymbolicLinker will do exactly what you're looking for, and it's free.
An applescript at the link provided by user nuc answered my question. Here is the applescript reproduced in case that link disappears.
I preferred the script given by the commenter jonn8n, which was also reproduced as Macworld article.
on run open {choose file with prompt ¬ "Choose a file to create a symbolic link:" without invisibles}
end run
on open the_files repeat with i from 1 to (count the_files) try set posix_path to POSIX path of (item i of the_files) if posix_path ends with "/" then set posix_path to ¬ text 1 thru -2 of posix_path do shell script "ln -s " & quoted form of posix_path ¬ & " " & quoted form of (posix_path & ".sym") end try end repeat
end openI saved this as an application using Script Editor and dragged the application to the Finder sidebar so I can now create symbolic links by dragging files or folders onto the application icon.
Path Finder adds this to your Finder, and adds a lot more features.
Use Automator.app to create a Service that executes a bash script. This is simpler than AppleScript and more reliable than installing third-party software.
for f in "$@"
do ln -s "$f" "$f.symlink"
doneThen you can access the Make Symbolic Link command under the Services menu:
The result:
A possible improvement on this script would be changing the run handler to use the currently selected files from the Finder, as so:
on run tell application "Finder" to set sel to selection open sel
end run
on open the_files repeat with i from 1 to (count the_files) try set posix_path to POSIX path of (item i of the_files as alias) if posix_path ends with "/" then set posix_path to ¬ text 1 thru -2 of posix_path try do shell script "ln -s " & quoted form of posix_path ¬ & " " & quoted form of (posix_path & ".sym") on error try do shell script "ln -s " & quoted form of posix_path ¬ & " " & quoted form of (posix_path & ".sym") with administrator privileges end try end try end try end repeat
end openYou could also edit [application]/Contents/Info.plist to add
<key>LSUIElement</key>
<true/>Just before the last </dict>. This would mean the app would run in the background, and wouldn't come to the front when you clicked on it.
Also, in Snow Leopard where SymbolicLinker doesn't work, you can create a Service with Automator to do either the Terminal command or AppleScript to create a symbolic link.
1One more AS:
tell application "Finder" repeat with f in (get selection) set p to POSIX path of (f as text) set p2 to POSIX path of (desktop as text) & name of f do shell script "ln -s " & quoted form of p & " " & quoted form of p2 end repeat
end tell Try looking here :
This is built into OSX already if you press the control key when you click on something.
2