![]() Every now and again I got a notification in Notification Center saying ‘Application X is blocking TextExpander’. In the last 6 months (at least) it just stopped working. There were three main reasons for this move, and whilst one of them was cost, it wasn’t the factor which drove this decision the most.įirstly was that TextExpander just stopped working for me. ![]() It did all of these things, so why did I feel the need to switch? I’ve been using TextExpander since I started using a Mac, so probably easily over 10 years. The British English flavour has over 2200, and you can download other packs such as Emoji and HTML snippets – all for free. An example of the second might be used within a URL schema that takes the clipboard contents and expands – so ‘order might translate to (where 12345 is the clipboard contents).Īdding spelling mistakes, in particular, might be a bit of an effort, but both of these applications ship with the ability to load shared snippet collections, and you guessed it – there are shared auto corrections for the majority common languages. You can go two steps further and expand spelling mistakes to their correct counterpart, or use ‘system’ information such as dates and times.Īdvanced applications ask for ‘inputs’ during the expansion and use ‘system’ information. It might not seem like a big task typing your email or phone number in, but if you can save a few seconds here and there, it all adds up. For example, you could have a snippet saved as ‘email which when typed expands to – or another one for ‘phone to expand to your phone number. However, if you’re interested as to why I moved away from TextExpander, and instead took up Typinator feel free to read on.īoth Typinator and TextExpander provide very similar functions, in that they allow you to save ‘snippets’ of text and then ‘expand’ them in any application you are using. The title of this blog post has already given away pretty much the entire contents of this article.
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