i’m completely frazzled on this one. i have a very simple applescript that changes the name extension of files on my desktop that have a .dat extension to a .csv. The script worked fine for months until this morning it stopped working. looked into it and there’s nothing wrong that i can see.
set thePath to path to desktop
set ext to "dat"
set extNew to "csv"
tell application "Finder" to set name extension of (files of thePath whose name extension is ext) to extNew
when i run that, i get:
the really weird thing is that if i swap it, so that it changes from .csv to .dat, it works just fine. uuugghhh, what is going on here??
Model: iMac
AppleScript: 2.6.1
Browser: Chrome 43.0.2357.130
Operating System: Mac OS X (10.9)
ok, did more testing with a different script just to see if it was recognizing it
set thisLocation to POSIX path of (path to desktop)
tell application "Finder"
set myFileNames to name of files of folder (thisLocation as POSIX file) whose name extension is "dat"
end tell
and i keep getting:
but when i change the file on the desktop to any other extension (i’ve tried csv, xlsx, pdf, jpg, and many more) it pulls it with ZERO problems. so, my system suddenly stopped recognizing dat as a file extension???
only thing i can figure is that something on my system took control of .dat files and suddenly finder doesn’t even recognize them. this is some weird s@#$
Have you tried to use diskutil to repair and check permissions?
I also wonder if you have you set any acl’s?
Having files open in other apps shouldn’t cause problems, but if any such app, isn’t a regular Cocoa app that uses NSDocument, I believe it might cause problems, at least if the file is open.
i have repaired disk permissions and reboot also. still the same problem. and no, no application is opening the file, in fact, there’s no application on my computer that is capable of opening it. that’s why i change the extension to csv. i also tried changing permissions on the file to full read and write for everyone in case that might have been an issue, but no go with that either.
You may want to try to “cat” the file in a terminal window, and see if it opens there.
You may also want to check any extended attributes (“ls -@”) when you are in the terminal window.
Hopefully, you have a backup on TimeMachine, if it turns out that the file is corrupted.
Edit
Are you a member of the group admin? -You check that too in the Terminal window by issuing: groups .
If not, then you should change the group to one you are a member of, if you aren’t an administrative user at all times.
What’s the result of this, it displays the name extension of all files of desktop
tell application "Finder" to set myFileExtensions to name extension of files of desktop
set {TID, text item delimiters} to {text item delimiters, return}
set myFileExtensions to myFileExtensions as text
set text item delimiters to TID
display dialog myFileExtensions
i have 3 files on my desktop. one is the dat file, then two of the applescripts that i was working on. it catches the scripts, but not the dat. well, it catches a file there (notice blank line) but not the extension
Maybe there is an invisible character along with the dot (.) please try to delete the fileextension, in the file info window of it in Finder. and then try to re-enter it.
set ext to ".dat"
set extNew to "csv"
tell application "Finder"
set filesToRename to files of desktop whose name ends with ext
repeat with aFile in filesToRename
set fileName to name of aFile
set name of aFile to text 1 thru -4 of fileName & extNew
end repeat
end tell