SearchLink gets a bit more social
I was working on Systematic show notes today and, as always, making good use of SearchLink for quickly adding links to my notes. Then I ran into a LinkedIn handle and decided I needed a faster way to do that. Fast forward an hour.
Yes, I could have opened a browser, searched for the username, and copied the url 120 times in the time it took me to do this, but next time it’s going to be a cinch.
For a while now SearchLink has had the ability to turn @ttscoff
into [@ttscoff](https://twitter.com/ttscoff)
, but not many other services, and that shorthand version only worked with Twitter. So, as of 2.2.16, you can now type i@ttscoff
and get [instagram.com/ttscoff](https://www.instagram.com/ttscoff/)
or l@BrettTerpstra
and get [linkedin.com/in/BrettTerpstra](https://www.linkedin.com/in/BrettTerpstra/)
.
The services handled are Twitter (t
), Facebook (f
), Instagram (i
) and LinkedIn (l
). These work as above in single-line searches, or using the full syntax like [](!@i ttscoff)
, which is replaced with [instagram.com/ttscoff](https://www.instagram.com/ttscoff/)
.
The format of the linked text can be defined in your ~/.searchlink
configuration file. The configuration option is social_template
and uses the placeholders %url%
, %user%
, and %service%
. You can combine these any way you like. As you can see in the examples above, my template is set to use an abbreviated url, e.g. social_template: "%url%"
. You can easily make them look like “ttscoff on Instagram” or “Instagram/ttscoff” with the placeholders. See the docs for details.
It’s a minor update, but as someone who interviews a lot of people, I’m constantly turning handles into links for show notes. This saves me a bunch of steps, so I’m not ashamed.
SearchLink v2.3.65
Generate Markdown links from web searches without leaving your editor.
Published 11/10/14.
Updated 01/16/24. Changelog
P.S. TextBuddy Stuff
An addendum because it’s so simple it doesn’t deserve its own post… I added another TextBuddy script that takes a bunch of methods in an Objective-C implementation file and turns them into declarations to stick in your interface. Basically just turns:
- (NSString *)myMethod:(NSString *)param {
// BUTTLOAD OF CODE
}
- (NSString *)anotherMethod:(NSString *)param {
// BUTTLOAD OF CODE
}
into…
- (NSString *)myMethod:(NSString *)param;
- (NSString *)anotherMethod:(NSString *)param;
It’s another one that there used to be an Xcode plugin for and I missed it.
You can find my slowly growing collection of TextBuddy scripts on GitHub.