Kevin Krammer wrote: > On Wednesday, 2009-11-18, James Tyrer wrote: >> Kevin Krammer wrote: >>> On Wednesday, 2009-11-18, Draciron Smith wrote: >>>> Ways people have found to get around things >>>> like not being able to add an app, or configure the desktops to show >>>> ONLY the apps on that destop. >>> Not able to add an app where to? >> I presume to KickOff. I had problems with early versions. Not sure >> what the problem was, but it appeared that the menu wouldn't update. I >> tried using KAppFinder to add some X utilities and it simply didn't >> work. I found that I had to add /usr/share to the XDG_DATA_DIRS path -- >> thought that it was the default. > > yes, /usr/local/share:/usr/share should be the default for XDG_DATA_DIRS if > not set to anything else. > Since you wrote "had to add": did you have to set to something else before? > Yes, I have KDE-4 installed in its own directory (/usr/KDE-4). So, I set XDG_DATA_DIRS to /usr/KDE-4/share). Apparently, that resulted in KDE-4 no longer using the default (/usr/share). Actually, I have some other things (Adobe reader & Sun JDK) in that path so it still would have been a problem if KDE-4 was installed in /usr. >> And now they are there without adding >> them. But, I can't add them to the Panel. > > Hmm, works for me using drag&drop onto an unlocked panel. Even moved applets > aside to make space. Also works to drop on the quick launch applet. > Where are the 'desktop' files for your X utilities? Mine are in /usr/share/applnk/Utilities/XUtilities/. Don't know how they originally got there. >>> And of course it is possible to only show the applications of the current >>> desktop in the taskbar. >>> It is one of the options in the taskbar's configuration dialog, which as >>> usual can be opened through the taskbar's context menu. >> This menu can be hard to find in some circumstances. Specifically, you >> have to click on a blank part of Task Manager which doesn't always >> exist. I have had this problem. It would be nice if all of these KCMs >> were accessible in System Settings. > > If I put the panel into configuration mode, I can click anywhere on an applet, > at least anywhere on the tasklist. > I didn't think of that. -- James Tyrer Linux (mostly) From Scratch ___________________________________________________ This message is from the kde mailing list. Account management: https://mail.kde.org/mailman/listinfo/kde. Archives: http://lists.kde.org/. More info: http://www.kde.org/faq.html.