Update - on MacOS High Sierra: you have to select the file, then hold down option and click the 'Action' (gear) button on the toolbar, to find the 'copy. I had no idea there were so many ways to do this. Jamie McKee at MacKey Composition alerted me to this: You can right-click on a file or folder in the Finder, and then hold down the option key and choose “Copy as Pathname”. ![]() Users/keithgilbert/Dropbox/Stock/Vector/Open Clipart Library/openclipart-0.18-svgonly/clipart/education/logaritmic_diagram_01.svg This method also puts the filename on the end of the path, so in my example above, the result is: I just discovered by reading Dan Rodney’s excellent list of Mac Keyboard Shortcuts that if you select a file in the finder and press command-option-c the path name is copied. ![]() Users/keithgilbert/Dropbox/Stock/Vector/Open Clipart Library/openclipart-0.18-svgonly/clipart/education The path will look like this after pasting: The file path is now on the clipboard, and can be pasted into a text document or an email. ![]() Select the full path next to “Where” in the Get Info dialog box I frequently need to copy the path to a file on my Mac or on a server, so that I can include that path in documentation or in a support email with a customer. ![]() This is obscure, but I ran across this recently and thought it might help someone else out.
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