Before re-inventing the wheel, I wanted to check whether someone's
already done this. Gnome and KDE apps seem to have an associated
*.desktop file, sort of like a Windows .PIF file. If you execute
"find / -name *.desktop > x" you'll end up with a whole bunch of files
in the list. One example is the serviceconf.desktop file
[root_at_localhost root]# cat /etc/X11/applnk/System/serviceconf.desktop
[Desktop Entry]
Name=Service Configuration
Name[ja]=............
Comment=Configure which services will be running when the system starts
Comment[ja]=..........................................................
Icon=serviceconf.xpm
Exec=/usr/bin/serviceconf
Type=Application
Terminal=false
The "Exec=" gives the name of the executable. Type the command
/usr/bin/serviceconf from a terminal in an X window, and serviceconf
comes up (asking for root password). Answer, and it runs. What would
be *REALLY* nice would be a script to list off the files, and parse
them for "Name=", "Icon=", and "Exec=", and then piperead commands to
build a menu on-the-fly.
Oh... hello everybody. I've been using FVWM2 for awhile, but I'm
still not very much past the newbie stage with it. I'm running Redhat
7.2 on a 450 mhz Dell with 128 megs of RAM. The latest versions of KDE
and Gnome find this a bit underpowered, and 7.1 wasn't much better.
That was what pushed me to FVWM2. A pleasant side-effect is the ability
to customize my desktop. I've got a minimalist approach with
FvwmIconMan on the bottom left and a modified FvwmButtons on the bottom
right, and a custom menu that pops up when I hit {ALT-F10}.
--
Walter Dnes <waltdnes_at_waltdnes.org>
If you had purchased $1000 of _at_home stock in 1999, today you would
have $1.30. If you had purchased $1000 of beer in 1999, today you
would still have $59 in empty cans.
--
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Received on Thu Jan 03 2002 - 12:17:26 GMT