Hazel Mac Rules

  
Hazel Mac Rules Rating: 3,6/5 4836 reviews

Processing Subfolders. When Hazel checks your rules against the item in a monitored folder, it normally treats files and folders the same—for example, a Move action moves either a file or a folder if it matches your conditions, and a Rename action renames either a file or folder if it matches. Hazel watches whatever folders you tell it to, automatically organizing your files according to the rules you create. Have Hazel move files around based on name, date, type, what site it came from and much more. Automatically sort your movies or file your bills. May 13, 2017  Hazel Rules Aren’t Meant To Be Broken Hazel is a Mac system alternatives pane that watches a folder and does distinct units of moves each time positive sets of conditions are met. You can add as many folders, conditions, and moves as you need. Manage Folders. By default, Hazel shows just one folder—Downloads (Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads)—but you can add as many folders as you like. For each folder, you can then create one or more rules to monitor the folder and perform the actions of your choice. Hazel watches whatever folders you tell it to, automatically organizing your files according to the rules you create. Have Hazel move files around based on name, date, type, what site it came from and much more. Automatically sort your movies or file your bills. Keep your files off the desktop and put them where they belong. Manage Folders. By default, Hazel shows just one folder—Downloads (Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads)—but you can add as many folders as you like. For each folder, you can then create one or more rules to monitor the folder and perform the actions of your choice. Nov 06, 2013  Effortless Paperless Nirvana With Mail, Hazel and Evernote. Now that Hazel is watching the Downloads folder, you need to define some rules. In Hazel, rules are defined in a similar manner as they are in Mail. You set some conditions to match and then some actions to perform. It doesn't stick around creating clutter on your Mac.

Automatically Organize

Hazel watches whatever folders you tell it to, automatically organizing your files according to the rules you create. Have Hazel move files around based on name, date, type, what site it came from and much more. Automatically sort your movies or file your bills. Keep your files off the desktop and put them where they belong.

Mac

More Than Just Filing

Hazel can open, archive, tag and even upload. You can have Hazel rename your files or sort them into subfolders based on name, date or whatever combination of attributes you choose. Coupled with Hazel’s powerful pattern matching feature, you can create workflows to process your files, your way.

Taking Out The Trash

Have Hazel keep your trash in check, deleting files that are too old or clearing things out when the trash gets too big. Also, when you delete applications, they can leave behind support files that never get cleaned up. With Hazel’s App Sweep, Hazel will detect when you throw an application away, search for its support files and offer to throw those away as well.

Total Support

Spotlight integration. Photos & iTunes importing. Notifications. Tags. AppleScript & Automator. Hazel provides deep support for OS X technologies, leveraging everything your system has to offer.

By default, Hazel shows just one folder—Downloads (Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads)—but you can add as many folders as you like. For each folder, you can then create one or more rules to monitor the folder and perform the actions of your choice.

Adding a folder, by itself, causes nothing to happen, so feel free to add any folders you think you’d like to monitor and then add rules at your leisure.

Add a Folder

Hazel can be used to organize almost any folder, but the best candidates are ones that tend to collect files, such as where your browser downloads files, where Mail puts attachments, or a shared Dropbox folder. Hazel can also use Smart Folders (with minor limitations).

Because folders associated with downloads are among the most common ones to monitor, Hazel offers a shortcut to some of the most common ones, known as Quick Folders. When you begin configuring Hazel, we suggest starting with folders in this category, and then moving on to conventional folders and Smart Folders.

Add a Quick Folder

To add a quick folder, go to Hazel’s “Folders” pane and click the plus button at the bottom of the Folders list. In the dialog that appears, choose a folder from the “Quick Folders” pop-up menu at the bottom and then click “Open.” Your choices are:

  • Safari Download Folder: The folder where Safari stores downloads. By default, this is Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads, but you can change it in “Safari” > “Preferences” > “General” > “File Download Location.”

  • Mail Download Folder: The folder in which Mail stores a copy of any attachment you open by double-clicking it in an email message. Like Safari, Mail uses Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads by default, but you can change it in “Mail” > “Preferences” > “General” > “Downloads Folder.”

  • Firefox Download Folder: The folder where Firefox stores downloads (Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads by default). You can change it in “Firefox” > “Preferences” > “General” > “Downloads”.

  • Transmission Download Folder: The folder where Transmission stores completed downloads. You must manually configure this to be a different location from where Transmission stores incomplete downloads, so that Hazel doesn’t operate on files before they’re fully downloaded. To do this, go to “Transmission” > “Preferences” > “Transfers” > “Adding.” Check “Keep incomplete files in” and choose (or create) a folder for in-progress files. Then choose a different folder from the “Default location” pop-up menu just above it. (Don’t use “Same as torrent file,” because that doesn’t refer to a fixed folder that Hazel can track.) The Quick Folder link will then point to Transmission’s “Default location,” which is where completed downloads are kept.

  • Chrome Download Folder: The folder where Chrome stores downloads. Like other browsers, Chrome uses Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads by default. You can change this in “Chrome” > “Preferences” > “Show advanced settings” > “Downloads.”

  • Opera Download Folder: The folder where Opera stores downloads. Opera uses Macintosh HD Users your-username Downloads by default, but you can change it in “Opera” > “Preferences” > “Download Location.”

If you use another app to download files regularly, you can add that location as a conventional folder (discussed just ahead). But note that you should not have Hazel watch a folder in which files download over an extended period of time (as is often the case with P2P and BitTorrent clients). Some such apps have an option to move completed downloads to another location—in such cases, you should have Hazel watch that secondary location. For example, Vuze (formerly called Azureus) lets you set this in “Vuze” > “Preferences” > “Files” > “Completion Moving.”

Add a Conventional Folder

If a folder you want Hazel to watch isn’t in the Quick Folder list, you can add it manually. Go to Hazel’s “Folders” pane and then do either of the following:

  • Little snitch pour iphone. Drag a folder from the Finder into the “Folders” list.

  • Click the plus button at the bottom of the “Folders” list. In the dialog that appears, navigate to the folder you want, select it, and click “Open.”

Hazel Mac Rules 2017

Add a Smart Folder

Hazel can also monitor Smart Folders, which are saved Finder searches. (For example, you might search for files with a certain tag that are also over a given size, and save that search so you can find matching files whenever you like. To learn more, see Apple’s support article Create or modify a Smart Folder.) This means that Hazel can, in theory, monitor any file or folder, anywhere on your Mac—as long as it matches well-defined search criteria.

To add an existing Smart Folder, go to Hazel’s Folders pane and click the plus button at the bottom of the “Folders” list. In the dialog that appears, choose “Saved Searches” from the “Quick Folder” pop-up menu at the bottom to display your Saved Searches folder. (If you’ve stored your Smart Folder somewhere else, navigate to that location instead.) Select the Smart Folder you want, select it, and click “Open.”

Hazel Mac Rules 2016

Important: Because Smart Folders represent files that may be located anywhere on your Mac, Hazel rules for Smart Folders cannot descend into subfolders or match against subfiles.

Tip: See a Folder’s Full Path

The folder list shows only folder names, not their locations. To see a folder’s full path, hover your pointer over the folder (without clicking). The path appears as a tool tip.

To see a folder in the Finder, right-click (or Control-click) the folder name and choose “Reveal in Finder” from the contextual menu.

Remove a Folder

To remove a folder from Hazel’s Folders list, select it and click the minus button at the bottom of the list. Read the warning that appears and click “Remove” to confirm.

Important: Removing a folder also removes all its rules. If you want to be able to use a rule on another folder, drag it to that folder first. (See Copy or Move a Rule.)

Set Folder Options

The lower-right corner of Hazel’s Folders pane has two “Throw away” options that apply to the currently selected folder and enable you to delete files you’re unlikely to need:

  • “Duplicate files”: Duplicate files are exact copies of files that were already downloaded to this folder, or that were duplicated in the Finder. These files usually include a number at the end, such as filename-1 or filename(1). When you select the “Duplicate files” checkbox, Hazel automatically removes duplicate files from this folder if they are identical to the original (the version of the file without the added number).

  • “Incomplete downloads”: Incomplete downloads occur when a download is aborted or interrupted. Hazel can automatically move these files to the Trash after the time period you set here. (Be sure to set a time period after which you’d be unlikely to resume a download.)

Note: These checkboxes apply to conventional folders and Quick Folders, but not to Smart Folders.

Hazel Mac Rules 2016

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