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-rw-r--r-- | source/blog/2015-03-22-back-up-os-x-app-icons.md | 6 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 4 deletions
diff --git a/source/blog/2015-03-22-back-up-os-x-app-icons.md b/source/blog/2015-03-22-back-up-os-x-app-icons.md index 7f9eec4b..53c73b06 100644 --- a/source/blog/2015-03-22-back-up-os-x-app-icons.md +++ b/source/blog/2015-03-22-back-up-os-x-app-icons.md @@ -1,15 +1,13 @@ --- -layout: post title: "Back up OS X app icons" date: 2015-03-22 16:58:50 -0700 -comments: true -categories: +date-display: March 22, 2015 --- OS X application icons are valuable assets, and it's interesting to see how they evolve over time. This is especially the case when we upgraded to OS X 10.10 Yosemite, when Apple and many design-aware third party developers overhauled (mainly flattened) their icons. However, we lose all the old icons when we do a major OS upgrade. Technically they still live in Time Machine backups, but those are a pain to pull out. Therefore, I wrote a script just now to back up app icons of all applications living in `/Applications` (including those symlinked to `/Applications`, e.g., apps installed through `brew cask`) and its level-one subdirectories, and `/System/Library/CoreServices` (for `Finder.app` and such). Here's the script: -```bash backup-app-icons +```bash #!/usr/bin/env bash function app_version { |