![]() This article describes the process for Firefox. If what you want is to examine an HTML file from the Internet, the solution to the problem is to change the browser's "View Source" default editor to TextMate, rather than trying to open all HTML files in TextMate. Not a Mac user, but from your question I get the impression that you are trying to open in TextMate. How is TweetDeck even giving you html files from links? That's strange. Double-clicking html files in the Finder opens them in TextMate.Clicking links in TweetDeck opens them in Safari.I just tried installing TweetDeck to test this out, and it all seems to work for me, so there must be a way: Maybe check the file association for webloc files on your system: drag a web page's favicon from your safari address bar to the desktop, and Get Info on that. I suspect that's not really a solution for you though. However, if there are only certain html files you want to associate with TextMate, you can do that: select the file, Get Info, and change the application under "open with". webloc files, then that's going to be a problem: you can't really have it both ways. html files to open in TextMate (this is what I have on my Mac), but if TweetDeck is also creating. ![]() I'm not familiar with TweetDeck, but the standard for link files (i.e.
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