Hi, Whenever I install a new text editor, it will "hijack" the files without notifying me. My .tex files were associated with Kile and when I recently installed emacs, it hijacked the file associations. This happens quiet often. Going by the Archway, I guess this is unwarranted. The system is doing something automatically without asking me first and I wish it didn't happen. I understand that when I installed Kile, it also automatically took up .tex for its use. But then I guess, .tex was not allocated to anything (excpet may be the default text editor for that env). What I wish is, by default all applications should be allocated to a text editor for that DE. (For example, Kwrite for KDE, Gedit for Gnome and so on.) But as the programs get installed, the programs should check whether there is a file association. If it is just to the text editor, then they can take over. However, if it is to some other program, then they should not do anything instead leave a message during installation that these file types were not changed because they are otherwise associated and then the user can change some if he wants. I know I can edit my custom preferences in ~/.local/share/mime folder or /usr/share/application/defaults.list. But still I was wondering about the default behaviour. ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- Cheers and Regards Jayesh Vinay Badwaik Electronics and Communication Engineering VNIT, INDIA -