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No library folder on mac os x el captain
No library folder on mac os x el captain













  1. #NO LIBRARY FOLDER ON MAC OS X EL CAPTAIN MAC OS X#
  2. #NO LIBRARY FOLDER ON MAC OS X EL CAPTAIN INSTALL#
  3. #NO LIBRARY FOLDER ON MAC OS X EL CAPTAIN UPGRADE#

Mathematica 11 Home and Wolfram Desktop 11 references a Folder that does not exist, so clearing the 'hidden' attribute does nothing.

#NO LIBRARY FOLDER ON MAC OS X EL CAPTAIN INSTALL#

Indeed the screenshot I showed you of the users Applications folder in my Sierra install the Applications folder has the Applications symbol on it, so it was created by the installation software.

#NO LIBRARY FOLDER ON MAC OS X EL CAPTAIN MAC OS X#

I have yet to verify that this case exists on 9 or 10ĮDIT: Contrary to what others indicate, this is not an OS X issue. I can google mac os x users home applications folder and you will see topics on the subject, some from these discussion pages. I ran into the same problem while trying to figure out why my importer for Apple Mail emlx files must be explicitly referenced while calling Import rather than automatically loading as the documentation says it should.ĮDIT: My answer concerns version 11. The short solution is to substitute $UserBaseDirectory in place of $BaseDirectory or, perhaps to reference the Application package itself /Applications/Mathematica.app/Contents/SystemFiles I am not sure, yet perhaps this is a defect caused by a missing tilde '~' which would you would expect to be expanded to reference the User domain aka ~/Library/Mathematica expanding to "/Users/foo/Library/Mathematica". Wolfram Desktop references /Library/Wolfram Desktop Mathematica references /Library/Mathematica In neither Wolfram Desktop nor Mathematica Home Edition does $BaseDirectory reference a directory/folder that exists on El Capitan. MenuItem["$TemporaryDirectory", KernelExecute[ MenuItem["$InstallationDirectory", KernelExecute[ SystemOpen ], MenuEvaluator -> "System" ], MenuItem["$UserBaseDirectory", KernelExecute[ Now you have to add the menu anywhere you find it handy: Menu["Locations",

#NO LIBRARY FOLDER ON MAC OS X EL CAPTAIN UPGRADE#

When you upgrade to El Capitan, OS X will save system components that do not comply with its new System Integrity Protection feature in a separate quarantine folder structure, so they will still exist on your system but just not be accessible to run as they did in OS X Yosemite. (*not everything from $ID is present in $USB so let's create that directory and file if that's necessary*)ĬreateDirectory The System Integrity Protection quarantine folder. (*we are going to play inside $UserBaseDirectory to not break installation*) Here's the procedure: (*aux function*)ĭir = FileNameJoin & I go there all the time so I added a menu to the main menu in order to not write this each time. Ok, so the quick way to find given directory is just to use SystemOpen dir. From the Finder of Mac OS, pull down the Go menu and hold down the SHIFT key Choose Library from the drop down list You can also hit Command+Shift+L from the MacOS Finder to immediately jump to the /Library directory of the active user account.















No library folder on mac os x el captain