gene heskett posted on Sat, 14 May 2011 10:01:49 -0400 as excerpted: > Greetings; > > How can I increase the number of common apps that show up in the > recently used portion at the top of the text style kde menu? Text-style kde menu? > This current method apparently only keeps time stamp order, and by the > time I have done half of my daily activities, the run once per boot > stuff, because they run 24/7, apps have scrolled off the bottom of the > list & I have to search through the menu's subdirs to find them again. > > One feature I loved/hated about the later kde3 was that if you used a > common set of apps, the list was kept over a reboot, so rerunning such > as kmail, gkrellm and a few shells here & there were automatically > restored as part of the kde startup dance. That appears to be no more, > or I have that option turned off someplace I can't find. > > If it is available, how can I re-enable this behavior? There are three "application launcher" menu style plasmoids available in kde by default, with others likely available from kdelook.org. However, I'd not call any of them "text style", as they all have icons and text (name/description/both depending on your prefs). Kickoff is the one that appears on the default panel. It has a search-box at the top, a row of icons (favorites/apps/computer/recently-used/leave) across the bottom, and a center menu area that changes depending on which of the bottom icons is selected. If you context-click on that with widgets unlocked, it'll let you change to the classic style menu, or you can add another "Application Launcher Menu" using the normal add-widgets functionality. Note that the label and icon difference between these is very small. In the widget list, one appears as "application launcher" (this is the new- style kickoff), the other as "application launcher menu" (the classic menu), both with the same K/gear icon. One other difference is that the description for the "classic" menu has the keyword "traditional" while the other one doesn't. The third option is lancelot. This one's somewhat different, with a layout initially looking like kickoff, but working differently and with different main categories, emphasizing email/IM contacts and unread messages, etc, in a separate category. The add widget list has a wine glass icon (the holy grail... lancelot... get it?) for this. Its interactivity design allows no-click (beyond the initial click-to-menu- open) access, thru the use of little launcher arrows that launch that item if only hovered. This one's definitely not my style, so I'll leave it at that. Of the three menu types, the classic menu is definitely most flexible in the number of configuration options offered. Individual categories can be activated/deactivated as desired from it's context menu, which makes it nice for adding various quick-access single-purpose menus, like the bookmarks menu (classic menu with only the bookmarks menu activated) I have configured right next to my kickoff menu. But most of interest here, the classic menu allows configuring the number of recently used apps that appear in its recently used menu. It defaults to the same 5 as kickoff, but the spinbox lets you set it higher, if desired. =:^) As an alternative, the Favorites menu, available from both kickoff and the classic menu (if so configured), is user configurable. In the apps menu on both kickoff and classic, you can context-click on an app and get the option to add it to the favorites menu. Likewise, context-clicking on an app in the favorites menu gives you the option to remove it. This isn't recently used, but it does give you a quick way to access the apps you want, without having to go thru the apps menu subdirs to find it. Yet another alternative is to simply type a bit of the name or description in the search box at the top of the kickoff menu. Pausing after three typed characters, the menu quickly changes to display matches only. As the search box is focused when the menu is opened, you can simply hit the hotkey you have configured to open kickoff and start typing, without using the mouse at all. krunner can of course be used similarly, typing in just a few letters and letting it do a match. Again, simply hitting the krunner hotkey and typing should get the desired result. -- Duncan - List replies preferred. No HTML msgs. "Every nonfree program has a lord, a master -- and if you use the program, he is your master." Richard Stallman ___________________________________________________ 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.