If the link isn’t clickable, almost always you can select it, right-click on it, and choose Open URL from the contextual menu. You’d think Apple would have set that up as a Mail command by now. Usually you’ll see something like some apps (like Mac Calendar) interpret the link Calendar shows “Show in Mail…” if you paste it into the URL field, which is really weird because you need a script like this one to get the link in the first place. Select a message, choose the Get Message URL script, switch to any other app, and paste the clipboard into any text field. Put this AppleScript in that folder-the script will only show up in the menu when Mail is the front application. Create a folder there named “Applications”, then one inside it named “Mail”. Once it’s turned on, open the Script menu (right side of the menu bar) and choose Open Scripts Folder > Open User Scripts Folder. There are various tools to launch AppleScripts, but the easiest (which doesn’t require any additional software) is the Script Menu. This is better than most systems of copying-and-pasting text, or forwarding email to other apps, because it’ll show you the message in its original context. You can then paste it into any notes field or document elsewhere-in most apps, it’ll automatically be treated as a link and clickable. It creates a link for any email you’ve selected in Mac Mail and puts it on the clipboard. I just gave an interview on Brett Terpstra’s Systematic podcast, when this AppleScript I’ve written came up.
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