There's a hidden pref controlling whether Growl will log
notifications to a file; by default, this pref is off. We have a
couple of scripts to toggle it:
<http://growldiscuss.googlegroups.com/web/Growl-
EnableDisableLogging.zip?gda=wvtpWU8AAADFugTN6rPCawTArMiIzv-
J4pTX9huJbSweINWNCrogiWG1qiJ7UbTIup-M2XPURDQpMbmj38So-
iGqDNT4ypmN7IiDooMyQEFzyq7pLO-q6w>
The default location of the log is the Logs folder in the Library
folder in your Home folder. There's another pref to change that, but
I can't think of a reason to (unless your startup disk is already low
on disk space and you want to log to some external device).
Speaking of disk space: Growl doesn't rotate the log; it will grow
indefinitely. Once you've learned whatever you want to learn from it,
you'll want to throw it away in order to save disk space.
> btw, growl is a great tool.
Thanks. ☺
Are there plans to include a native feature of this sort in the UI? Even tracking the last 30 days would be nice. It's been more than once that a notification has appeared and faded, and I've just glanced at it as it was disappearing, but I could tell from either one word or an icon that it was actually something relevant that I wanted to see.btw. growl is a great tool.
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