Looking for help/tutorials/sample code of using python to listen to distributed notifications from applications on a mac. I know the py-objc lib is the bridge between python and mac/cocoa classes, and the Foundation library can be used to add observers, but looking for examples or tutorials on how to use this to monitor iTunes.
-
Does iTunes actually post distributed notifications these days? – Azeem.Butt Dec 19 '09 at 15:03
-
Yes it does.... under com.apple.iTunes.player, using notification watch i can see them. – ismail Dec 19 '09 at 16:26
2 Answers
If anyone comes by to this question, i figured out how to listen, the code below works. However accessing attributes do not seem to work like standard python attribute access.
Update: you do not access attributes as you would in python i.e (.x), the code has been updated below, it now generates a dict called song_details.
Update3: Update to the code, now subclassing NSObject, removed adding the addObserver from the class. Will keep the code updated on github, no more updates here.
import Foundation
from AppKit import *
from PyObjCTools import AppHelper
class GetSongs(NSObject):
def getMySongs_(self, song):
song_details = {}
ui = song.userInfo()
for x in ui:
song_details[x] = ui.objectForKey_(x)
print song_details
nc = Foundation.NSDistributedNotificationCenter.defaultCenter()
GetSongs = GetSongs.new()
nc.addObserver_selector_name_object_(GetSongs, 'getMySongs:', 'com.apple.iTunes.playerInfo',None)
NSLog("Listening for new tunes....")
AppHelper.runConsoleEventLoop()

- 3,882
- 5
- 36
- 47
The source code for GrowlTunes might give you some clues here. You'd have to translate from Objective-C to PyObjC, but eh, whatever. :)
GrowlTurnesController.m (Or grab the whole growl source tree and navigate to GrowlTunes so you can see it all in action.: here's a link to the directions on how to get the source

- 13,890
- 1
- 36
- 60
-
Thanks for the help, managed to figure it out using pyobjc website & apple web site. – ismail Dec 20 '09 at 20:07