No idea why one system correctly uses Dolphin but the other > the correct directory is opened using the default Gnome file manager, > directory using the default KDE file manager, Dolphin. On the first one, "Open containing folder" correctly opens the > running on KDE 4.6.0 on openSUSE 11.4, and the other KDE 4.9.5 on openSUSE > I have two systems with Mozilla/5.0 (X11 Linux x86_64 rv:19.0) (In reply to Tristan Miller from comment #30) Ī wild guess is that in gnome there's gnome-settings-manager that makes whatever file associations you change in Gnome get applied when you log into Gnome, but gnome-settings-manager isn't run in KDE. The problem was that by default the command line in sktop was "dolphin %i -caption "%c" %u" and that didn't work in kde 4.1.2 but it works OK with the same command line in KDE 4.2 (I wouldn't take that to the court, though :) ) I know for sure that it's working OK in kde 4.2. The problem that existed with dolphin not using the right folder url has vanished in kde 4.2. However you can maintain a local copy that will not be changed when you install anything else, put a copy of defaults.list and mimeinfo.cache in your home folder in ~.local/share/applications. Inode/directory=kde4-kfmclient_dir.desktop īe aware though that /usr/share/applications/mimeinfo.cache will be changed automatically when you install a new *relevant* programme/file manager such as nautilus. To use konqueror instead of dolphin it should be: desktop file is going to be used and it exists in /usr/share/applications then use its plain name without a prefix. Notice the extra kde4 in sktop, this is necessary because sktop is not in the same folder as mimeinfo.cache mimeinfo.cache is in /usr/share/applications while sktop is in /usr/share/applications/kde4. desktop name up front, so to use dolphin, change it to: Basically you need to edit the "inode/directory=" entry and put the desired application's. You can manually make "Open containing folder" use your favourite programme by editing /usr/share/applications/mimeinfo.cache. inode/directory) exists in both defaults.list and mimeinfo.cache firefox will take whatever mimeinfo.cache says. So for example it will change when you install nautilus or pcmanfm in kde.įirefox will look first at defaults.list but will give preference to mimeinfo.cache. usr/share/applications/mimeinfo.cache : this is a dynamically changing file, it's changed when you install a new programme. usr/share/applications/defaults.list : this is, AFAICT, a static file created when you first install the system It seems that firefox (and most GTK apps running in kde3 and kde4, such as file-roller and catfish) don't respect kde's file type associations.
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