I wanted an easy way to shorten my URLs through one of the URL-shorteners out there. I liked bit.ly, because it’s nice and short, has an easy to navigate web-interface (without a mouse) and I can use its magic with my terminal (cURL).

I also very much like TextExpander and after googling a bit, I ofcourse found an Applescript for TextExpander and Bit.ly. That link also shows how to set it up in TextExpander, very handy!
The script does not however use your actual bit.ly account so you can keep track of the URLs you shorten. I tweaked it and made adjustments and it took hours and ofcourse, then I find this which is almost exactly what I had, except with URL-encoding (yummy).
The only problem with that one was that I couldn’t get it to have the URLs show up in my recent history. The ‘history=1’ didn’t seem to work.

I tweaked some more and came up with something that completely does what I want. I use OmniWeb so I replaced the

set the PageURL to (the clipboard as string)

with

tell application "OmniWeb"
    set PageURL to address of active tab of browser 1
end tell

If you use safari, use

tell application "Safari"
    set PageURL to URL of front document
end tell


I’ve made this as readable as possible, the ‘¬’ do matter in Applescript.

tell application "OmniWeb"
    set PageURL to address of active tab of browser 1
end tell

set login to "YOUR LOGIN"
set api_key to "YOUR API KEY"
set the EncodedURL to urlencode(PageURL) of me

set curlCMD to ¬
    "curl --stderr /dev/null \"http://api.bit.ly/shorten?longUrl=" ¬
    & EncodedURL & "&history=1&version=2.0.1&login=" & login ¬
    & "&apiKey=" & api_key ¬
    & "\"| grep shortUrl | grep -o http.*[/a-zA-Z0-9]"


-- Run the script and get the result:
set bitlyURL to (do shell script curlCMD)

return bitlyURL

on urlencode(theText)
    set theTextEnc to ""
    repeat with eachChar in characters of theText
        set useChar to eachChar
        set eachCharNum to ASCII number of eachChar
        if eachCharNum = 32 then
            set useChar to "+"
        else if (eachCharNum ≠ 42) and (eachCharNum ≠ 95) ¬
            and (eachCharNum < 45 or eachCharNum > 46) ¬
            and (eachCharNum < 48 or eachCharNum > 57) ¬
            and (eachCharNum < 65 or eachCharNum > 90) ¬
            and (eachCharNum < 97 or eachCharNum > 122) then
            set firstDig to round (eachCharNum / 16) rounding down
            set secondDig to eachCharNum mod 16
            if firstDig > 9 then
                set aNum to firstDig + 55
                set firstDig to ASCII character aNum
            end if
            if secondDig > 9 then
                set aNum to secondDig + 55
                set secondDig to ASCII character aNum
            end if
            set numHex to ("%" & (firstDig as string) ¬
                & (secondDig as string)) as string
            set useChar to numHex
        end if
        set theTextEnc to theTextEnc & useChar as string
    end repeat
    return theTextEnc
end urlencode
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One Response

  1. Christian says:

    Unfortunately I’m experiencing difficulties when using german characters like “ö” “ä” “ü” “ß”

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