On Saturday 17 September 2016 04.35:28 Nathan Rugg wrote: > On 09/17/2016 09:57 AM, Kate Draven wrote: > >> I recently installed Trinity and everything is going well except that > >> konqueror classifies all files with no extension as octet-stream. Any > >> idea how to fix that problem? If I use `file` from the command line like > >> this `file --mime-type FILENAME`, it will give the correct mime type. > >> GTK programs also work correctly. It appears to be something specific > >> with TDE. > >> > >> Thanks. > >> > >> Nathan Hello Nathan, You don't say what distribution you installed on, nor what type the files really are. You don't say either why you have files without extension. Do they come from another system (I mostly know Windows and Mac users to create such as their OS/UI hide the extensions by default). I tried to duplicate your problem here (openSUSE 13.1 + TDE 14) but I can't: - If I remove the extension to LibreOffice files, Konqueror still identifies them correctly - If I create files without extension (I can't do that with LibreOffice, by the way) with kedit, I get this: An empty text file is seen as "unknown", Konqueror asks me to choose the program to open it. If I type a few words into the file, it gets identified as "plain text" So it seems to me that Konqueror actually has a way to analyse the file. This might point to a problem in identifying your files. Anyway, I am not sure your problem is TDE specific, at least as long as it is a problem of "no extension", because here Konqueror does not classify files without extension as octet-stream. There seems to be someting specific also to your files. Thierry --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: trinity-users-unsubscribe@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx For additional commands, e-mail: trinity-users-help@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx Read list messages on the web archive: http://trinity-users.pearsoncomputing.net/ Please remember not to top-post: http://trinity.pearsoncomputing.net/mailing_lists/#top-posting