All of these resources can then be displayed directly in Journler (even Web pages) without having to open the originating application. This not only includes photos from iPhoto or songs from iTunes, but also cards from Address Book and links from Safari. Journler can also pull in resources from other Apple programs. And just like the iLife applications, Journler includes the ability to create smart folders that will help you automatically keep documents together based on their subject and content. Just as iTunes keeps track of songs and iPhoto keeps track of pictures, Journler keeps track of your documents. MacWorld reviewer Jason Cranford Teague had this to say while giving it 4 ½ mice, and I quote a bit of his review: In many ways, Journler is like iLife for your writing. 2.5.4 is the latest official version, but I've had considerable success with the Journler 2.5.5 betas which improve almost weekly (with an auto-update feature, so easy to keep them current).
#Macjournal cache upgrade#
In between are Mori, which is scriptable Caboodle, which is an unscriptable "snippet" collector Yojimbo, which is Spotlight searchable and in its latest version now scriptable SOHO Notes (an upgrade from its former version: StickyBrain), which I had used for years, but not scriptable (which is why I was looking) MacJournal, which seems to be aimed at blogging and podcasting but is not scriptable and finally Journler, a relatively new mid-priced shareware app that's under intense development by Phil Dow and seemed to me to have the features I wanted. If you want simple lists, an outliner is enough - something like OmniOutliner will do the trick, and at the other extreme of sophistication as mentioned above, DEVONThink is for you. There are lots of possibilities out there too. I didn't need a powerful (and expensive) database manager like DEVONThink but I did want an elegant, inexpensive ($25, fully-functional demo), middle-of-the-road application for storing virtually anything and recovering it with a simple search from either its user interface or from a script. I wanted this note manager/snippet collector to be scriptable (what else, coming from the editor of these pages?). Total processing time spent in importer plug-ins: 0.I wanted a simple, friendly GUI to a database of thoughts and ideas that was also a writing tool in essence an easily searched, easily edited journal that would allow me to attach images and other media. Mdimport -r -p -d2 /Applications/DEVONthink\ Pro.app/Contents/Library/Spotlight/DEVONthink\ Spotter.mdimporter Tried to manually reimport the DTP entries by typing
![macjournal cache macjournal cache](https://www.journaldulapin.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/03/Capture-d%E2%80%99%C3%A9cran-2013-03-11-%C3%A0-12.11.07-640x608.png)
Turned off Spotlight indexing for the DTP database, deleted DTP, restarted, reinstalled DTP, and turned Spotlight indexing on again.Ĥ.
![macjournal cache macjournal cache](https://www.journaldulapin.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Capture-d%E2%80%99%C3%A9cran-2018-04-07-%C3%A0-18.01.31.png)
dtp1 in ~/Library/Caches/Metadata/DEVONThink Pro/ģ. There are 1211 files with the file extension. Made sure that Spotlight indexing is enabled for DTP by going into "database properties" and toggled spotlight indexing on and off (and clicked the "rebuild" button). They can't be excluded from System Preferences > Spotlight >, and besides, nothing has changed there.
#Macjournal cache pro#
For reasons that escape me, all of a sudden, the DevonThink Pro entries stopped appearing in Spotlight searches. I'm posting here because I'm having trouble with DEVONThink Pro, and the developers are at wit's end (so am I). I have a number of apps that do this, such as Evernote, MacJournal, DevonThink Pro - and Safari! Experienced users know that third-party database-type apps can make their entries accessible to Spotlight by depositing special files in ~/Library/Caches/Metadata/.