Toshio Kuratomi wrote: > Is kappfinder just using the .desktop format to keep its own database? Kappfinder is a relict from ancient times where KDE apps would only register themselves in KDE menus, GNOME apps would only register themselves in GNOME menus, and everything else would usually do neither (or in some cases it would attempt to register in one or both of the menus, with varying success). In that era, it made sense for KDE (*) to go and look for installed applications with no menu entries, adding them to the menu as it found them. Thanks to freedesktop.org, those times are long gone. What kappfinder did was that it searched for installed applications it had a .desktop file for, and if found (without a menu entry already present), installed that .desktop file in the menu. Note that none of those applications were actually part of kdebase, only the .desktop files were. Those .desktop files would only be installed into the actual menu if the application was actually found on the system at runtime. As this no longer makes any sense in the current freedesktop.org times, kappfinder was discontinued by upstream and removed from the KDE Software Compilation. Thus, you won't find it in current Fedora releases anymore. Kevin Kofler (*) Yes, the software was called just "KDE" back then. -- devel mailing list devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx https://admin.fedoraproject.org/mailman/listinfo/devel