5

On 27 February 2003, Apple employee Christopher Nebel said he'd like to straighten out this problem as reported by Bill Cheeseman:

Because of the different naming for applications and application processes in some circumstances, we end up having to write slightly confusing scripts like this (if we've renamed Adobe Photoshop 7.0 to "Photoshop" in the Finder):

tell application "Photoshop" to activate
tell application "System Events"
tell application process "Adobe Photoshop 7.0"

Suffice it to say, it's still a problem in August 2011, and I keep running into it, so I hope the good folks here at StackOverflow can help find a workaround; thanks in advance!

Given an application name (i.e. something I can instruct to activate), I'd like to be able to pass that name to a subroutine to find the corresponding process name. Conversely, given a process name, I'd like to be able to pass it to a subroutine to find the corresponding application name.

Any suggestions?

2
  • One option, if given the application name, would be to activate the application and then get the process name of the frontmost process, but this seems a bit unreliable: prone to fail if the application runs in the background, or is busy, or suchlike.
    – user82216
    Aug 3, 2011 at 17:43
  • I.e. as per stackoverflow.com/questions/5913738/…
    – user82216
    Aug 3, 2011 at 18:09

3 Answers 3

4

The following code suffices. It draws, to some extent, upon fireshadow52's answer and upon a post at MacScripter.net.

on GetApplicationCorrespondingToProcess(process_name)
    tell application "System Events"
        set process_bid to get the bundle identifier of process process_name
        set application_name to file of (application processes where bundle identifier is process_bid)
    end tell
    return application_name
end GetApplicationCorrespondingToProcess

on GetProcessCorrespondingToApplication(application_name)
    tell application "System Events"
        set application_id to (get the id of application "Adobe Acrobat Professional" as string)
        set process_name to name of (application processes where bundle identifier is application_id)
    end tell
    return process_name
end GetProcessCorrespondingToApplication

-- Example usage:
display dialog (GetProcessCorrespondingToApplication("Adobe Acrobat Professional") as string)
display dialog (GetApplicationCorrespondingToProcess("Acrobat") as string)
2
on get_application_name(this_process)
    tell application "System Events" to set the BID to (get the id of application process this_process)
    tell application "Finder" to return the name of every item of (path to applications folder) whose id is BID and kind is "Application"
end get_application_name

-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

on get_process_name(this_application)
    tell application "Finder" to set the BID to (get the id of application this_application)
    tell application "System Events"
        set open_applications to (get id of every application process) as list
        return every item of open_applications whose id is BID
    end tell
end get_process_name         

Both of these subroutines are untested, so they may not do what they're supposed to. :S

UPDATE: A process refers to an application that is already open.

6
  • No joy, I'm sorry to say. Putting the two subroutines at the start of a script, followed by the line, 'get_application_name from process "Acrobat"' gives a Syntax Error message. Putting 'my get_application_name from process "Acrobat"' inside a tell block results in Applescript Editor changing it to 'get_application_name of me from process "Acrobat"', which gives an Applescript Error message when executed: 'Can’t make application process "Acrobat" into type integer.' Putting 'get_application_name from process "Acrobat"' (experimentally) also gives an Applescript Error message.
    – user82216
    Aug 3, 2011 at 20:10
  • I would try just changing both of the subroutine calls to the normail kind (i.e. get_application_name("Acrobat")); the fancy calls aren't really necessary. Aug 3, 2011 at 20:41
  • I agree about not needing fancy calls. Still no joy, but I reckon I can probably tweak it until it works. Thanks for your help though.
    – user82216
    Aug 3, 2011 at 20:57
  • No problem! That's why we're here. :) Aug 4, 2011 at 0:38
  • What is the script doing that it shouldn't? Maybe I can help some more. :) Aug 4, 2011 at 0:49
2

I find this works very well:

on GetApplicationCorrespondingToProcess(process_name)
  tell application "System Events"
    set application_file to file of (application processes where name is process_name)
  end tell
  return application_file
end GetApplicationCorrespondingToProcess

on GetProcessCorrespondingToApplication(application_name)
  tell application "System Events"
    set process_name to name of my application application_name
  end tell
  return process_name
end GetProcessCorrespondingToApplication

-- Example usage:
set myprocess to GetProcessCorrespondingToApplication("Terminal") as string
set myfile to GetApplicationCorrespondingToProcess(myprocess) as string
set mypath to the POSIX path of myfile -- create this just to compare to myfile
set myapp to do shell script "myval='" & myfile & "' ; echo ${myval%.app:} | awk -F':' '{print ($NF)}'"
log myprocess
log myfile
log mypath
log myapp

-- A process appears to be the name of the MacOS executable within the application.
-- Replace "Terminal" by "Firefox" to see the distinction.
-- Also, you could substitute mypath for myfile and / for : in "set myapp ...".

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