7 comments

  • alin23 32 minutes ago
    I've just used this extensively to build 200 Shortcuts for my event-based automation app on macOS [0], because some actions you simply can't do without Shortcuts: changing Focus Mode, toggling Accessibility functions like Color Filters, accessing the Private Cloud Compute model etc.

    I also wrote about how Claude was able to basically learn the language from scratch and write those fully compilable Shortcuts for me [1] because it was mind boggling to me that an LLM can do that. Curiously, this is becoming more and more normal in my mind.

    [0] https://lowtechguys.com/crank

    [1] https://alinpanaitiu.com/blog/how-good-is-claude-really/#che...

  • _doctor_love 7 minutes ago
    Very cool! IMHO Apple Shortcuts will finally get the love they're due in the age of AI.
  • simquat 34 minutes ago
    Looks quite cool and I'd like to give a try. What is the main use case for compiling code to shortcuts? I ask because I'm working on a tool[0] that in a way does the opposite.

    [0] https://breadboards.io

  • threecheese 2 days ago
    I’m interested to understand how this is different than Jelly; they seem to be similar. Same for Scriptable. I’ve been looking at this to hand over to Claude to build Shortcuts, something which has a terrible development experience.
  • hmartin 1 hour ago
    Could you explain more about how the signing setup works?

    (That's what held me back most for spending more effort on shortcuts.)

    • yg1112 1 hour ago
      From the repo, it signs natively on macOS and falls back to a cloud signing server (shortcut-signing-server). That fallback matters -- without macOS you would have to reverse-engineer Apple signing format yourself, and it changes across iOS versions. The hosted signing server is really what makes the whole cross-platform toolchain viable.
  • aaronbrethorst 1 hour ago
    Adjacently, does anyone know of a Terraform-like syntax for creating GitHub Actions YML files?