
Takes a pre-written email signature written in Markdown and converts it to rich text, then copies to it the clipboard to be pasted into the body an email.
Asks you to enter a subject line and then a message, then saves both as an email draft in the Mail app.
Save a short note to yourself by dictating or typing in the body, then automatically sending the email to your own email address with a canned title.
Opens my email app of choice Gmail so I can immediately see relevant emails, then quickly filter out anything I don’t care about.
Copies a prefilled email address to your clipboard to paste elsewhere.
Creates a nested folder structure for a video project in the Movies folder.
Asks you to pick an area, then project from that area, then opens it in Things.
Pick a photo or file, then set it as your Lock Screen, Home Screen, or both.
Presents a menu for various Twitter search operations, including jumping right into the search field, showing Twitter Moments, searching through all tweets, cutting down results to only people you follow, or even searching your own tweets.
With this one tool, you can take advantage of all the awesome options buried in Twitter search – it’s like Google for people you follow.
This uses a combination of donated actions from Twitter, the Search Web action native to Shortcuts, and deep links taken from the web.
Creates a series of prompts to save a gift and the giver’s name to an ongoing note.
Takes a location as input or your current location and searches for nearby destinations noted as Landmarks, then opens your selected option in Maps.
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