One can tag files and folders with a color in the Mac OS X Finder. Is there a way to do this from a shell script?

link|improve this question
feedback

4 Answers

up vote 5 down vote accepted

This shell script takes the file or folder name as its first argument and the label index (0 for no label, 1 for red, ..., 7 for gray) as its second argument.

#!/bin/sh
osascript -e "tell application \"Finder\" to set label index of alias POSIX file \"`cd -P -- "$(dirname -- "$1")" && printf '%s\n' "$(pwd -P)/$(basename -- "$1")"`\" to $2"

More directly, if $filename is a shell variable with the absolute path name of the file or folder to be labeled and $label is a shell variable with the label index number,

osascript -e "tell application \"Finder\" to set label index of alias POSIX file \"$filename\" to $label"

is a shell command to assign the label to the file or folder.

link|improve this answer
This will fail if the filename contains double quotes or ends with a backslash. – Kevin Reid Mar 14 '10 at 0:27
@Kevin: Any solution to that? – Svish Jul 28 '10 at 18:37
@Kevin: Also... why would you have a filename containing double quotes? I thought that was invalid... or maybe just in Windows... – Svish Jul 28 '10 at 18:43
The only characters not allowed in filenames are NUL (U+0000) and the path separator (which is either "/" or ":" depending on which API you look through). A safe way to pass strings to AppleScript is to to give command-line args to osascript (that is, osascript -e <script> <arg> and then retrieve them using an on run theArguments ... end run handler inside the script. – Kevin Reid Jul 30 '10 at 1:36
feedback

One ugly way to do this would be:

exec osascript <<\EOF
tell app "Finder"

    -- [...]
    -- selecting the file
    -- [...]

    -- 4 is Blue
    set label index of thisItem to 4
end tell

Basically launching an applescript that uses finder to set the color.

I got the hints from:

(Color) http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20070602122413306

(Shell) http://www.macosxhints.com/article.php?story=20040617170055379

link|improve this answer
feedback

Based on the responses here and in referenced posts, I made the following function and added it to my ~/.bash_profile file:

# Set Finder label color
label(){
  if [ $# -lt 2 ]; then
    echo "USAGE: label [0-7] file1 [file2] ..."
    echo "Sets the Finder label (color) for files"
    echo "Default colors:"
    echo " 0  No color"
    echo " 1  Orange"
    echo " 2  Red"
    echo " 3  Yellow"
    echo " 4  Blue"
    echo " 5  Purple"
    echo " 6  Green"
    echo " 7  Gray"
  else
    osascript - "$@" << EOF
    on run argv
        set labelIndex to (item 1 of argv as number)
        repeat with i from 2 to (count of argv)
          tell application "Finder"
              set theFile to POSIX file (item i of argv) as alias
              set label index of theFile to labelIndex
          end tell
        end repeat
    end run
EOF
  fi
}
>

link|improve this answer
Perfect, thanks. – zekel May 10 '11 at 22:48
feedback

There's also the command line tool 'setlabel' in the osxutils package. It doesn't require AppleScript or that the Finder be running.

link|improve this answer
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.