Running Multiple Same Applications
'24 inch Intel I-Mac, Mac OS X (10.5.6)
'24 inch Intel I-Mac, Mac OS X (10.5.6)
Brian Postow wrote:
On my mac, man open doesn't say anything about opening multiple copies of the same app. It certainly doesn't say anything about opening foo.app/Contents/MacOS/foo which I'm sure is something that Apple doesn't really want us doing...
SergioBarr wrote:
Hello All. I was really wondering if OSX has the ability to run the same application at the same time. Example would be like Firefox, Safari, World Of War Craft ETC... I know on a PC I can run as many instances of the same app on my PC as I needed and would like to know if this is at all possible on a MAC. Very Much appreciated for any and all intel on this subject. Please Advise...
Brian Postow wrote:
Very interesting!
Do you know if method 2 is a documented feature? or might it get "fixed" at some point in the future?
nerowolfe wrote:
If you right-click textedit.app, for example, one of the options is "Show Package Contents"
Remember that Leopard, like most of an iceberg, is below the surface. Knowing how to use the entirety of Leopard is important for some of us. It's fun and one never stops learning new things.
Brian Postow wrote:
nerowolfe wrote:
If you right-click textedit.app, for example, one of the options is "Show Package Contents"
This is a NEW feature in 10.5.3 IIRC. And a feature that I am very happy with.
Remember that Leopard, like most of an iceberg, is below the surface. Knowing how to use the entirety of Leopard is important for some of us. It's fun and one never stops learning new things.
I'm not disagreeing with any of that. I'm just wondering if there is documentation on opening the actual executable files. open is NOT a standard unix command. I believe it's a mac specific thing, it doesn't exist in BSD based Ultrix, SunOS or any other unix I've used. So Apple CAN decided how it gets used, and what it does, and the documentation would have to be Apple's.
And I still want to know how applescript interacts with this feature. Because you usually just say "tell textedit.app ....." If there are two instances, which one gets the message? and where is this documented?
Also, my main point above was that your comment of "look at the man page" didn't actually answer my question.
If you right-click textedit.app, for example, one of the options is "Show Package Contents"
This is a NEW feature in 10.5.3 IIRC. And a feature that I am very happy with.
It came along with the first version of Leopard, 10.5.0
Jeffrey Jones2 wrote:
Running multiple versions of an application is almost never necessary or useful, and can often be harmful. Applications often modify resources such as preferences and files in Applications Support. If more than one instance were open at a time, they could interfere with each other and possibly corrupt the files. Safari and Firefox, for example, can open as many windows as you want. There is no need to use separate processes.
Running Multiple Same Applications