On Wednesday 12 April 2006 04:45pm, Erwin Rol wrote: > On Wed, 2006-04-12 at 22:23 +0000, Kevin Kofler wrote: > > > If you drop Linux I am sure you can use outlook. I use a Gnome desktop > > > and no matter how ppl keep repeating the "you can use KDE apps" it does > > > not work. Using KDE apps on a Gnome Desktop is like using a wine > > > outlook on a Linux desktop, it works but there are zillion little > > > things like cut and paste, > > > > Cut&paste is completely compatible between KDE and GNOME apps and has > > been for a long time now! The Qt clipboard bug where it mixed up PRIMARY > > (selection) and CLIPBOARD was fixed ages ago. > > Might just be me, but in kdevelop (the only kde application i use) i > always end up screwing cut and paste up, since ctrl-c/v and > middle-mouse-button seem to interact at random. It's not random. If you use <CTRL>+<V>, it copies the item to the clipboard *and* marks that clipboard entry as the "checked" one. Using the mouse to select text does not "check" the entry in the clipboard. Either way, middle-clicking your mouse will paste from the "last mouse selection" unless another clipboard has been activated (i.e. "checked"). This is normal X with multiple clipboards available. GNOME has no mechanism to deal with multiple clipboards in X, but KDE does and uses it by default. klipper lets you manage the multiple clipboards. > > > default file browser, default web browser, > > > > Run kcontrol and you can set your file associations. Getting Kontact to > > run your GNOME applications when you open a file or URL in it is not > > hard. The default browser for KDE apps is the setting for "text/html". > > Why would i have to run kcontrol ? I mean i am using a Gnome desktop, > not a KDE one. kcontrol has lots of knobs and switches. However, you don't need to tweak very many of them at all. In this case, he's talking about changing the file launcher configurations so that you would get Firefox or Mozilla (or whatever) instead of Konqueror when you click a link in an email in Kontact. > > > system settings etc. that all are different. > > > > Just set them to the same thing. KDE is very flexible, it's possible to > > get it to match the GNOME configuration very closely. > > So you are suggesting that everybody will set all settings twice, one > time for Gnome and one time for KDE? This is exactly the problem with a > Gnome and KDE mix, it is a PITA. No, we're not talking about everyone setting all their settings twice. Just tweak the things you want for the apps you want. That's not going to be very much stuff. With KDE, once you've got that figured out, it's pretty easy to mass deploy such configuration changes, too, so you really will only *have* to do this once (unless you change your mind frequently :) ). -- Lamont R. Peterson <lamont@xxxxxxxxxxxx> Senior Instructor Guru Labs, L.C. [ http://www.GuruLabs.com/ ] GPG Key fingerprint: F98C E31A 5C4C 834A BCAB 8CB3 F980 6C97 DC0D D409
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