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try to create a new .kdestop file for your device (right click on your desktop, create new, device link, HD) selecting your device file (look in /etc/fstab, it should be sdxx something). If the .desktop file can mount your USB disk, it means you can use it in KDE, so you can move it wherever you want. I hope I've been clear enough.
Well, try printing url.url(), this should print the unparsed string the KURL gets constructed with. It should be mailto:... If I'm not mistaken url.host() works only with file: and http,ftp: URL types. To parse email addresses you should use url() and then extract the host manually. I hope this has helped you
Sorry, but I haven't understood: do the signal get generated (when you click on a mai link) or does it not even get generated?
On my system they are just OK. I've used KHTML part even on low spec machine, but still it is responsive. What kde version are you using?
AFAIK, you have to implement that by hand. All the help you can get from KHTML part is some events for mouse clicks, and from Kapp you can have the standard actions (cut, paste and copy are there)
well, I forgot DCOP. You can take the list of addresses in your file, pipe them through somethink like xargs, and send kmail a DCOP request for each address. Hi
Well, if you can use something different from KMail, I'll suggest some command-line mailers (as mail). With a simple shell script you can achieve what you want easily.
Have you disabled arts from control center->sound and multimedia->sound server? (I do not remember the exact english words in the control center, as my system is in Italian, but it should not be difficult to figure it out) If you have already done that, you should remove artsd from the session management. Hi
Well, konqueror has domain specific settings for plugins. You can reject or allow plugins for specific domains. You can find it in Source code 1 konqueror->settings->configre konqueror->plugins->domain-specific settings Here you can ad rules, and I think (but I'm not sure) you can use wildargs in the domain name. Hi
I think it depends on your distro. However for SuSE the settings for an user are in ~/.kde/share/applnk whether the standard menu is in /opt/kde3/share/applnk The user directory only stores different entries from the ones in the standard dir. Hope I've understood your question Hi
Quoted root can run kde apps fine. Problem only occurs with normal users It seems a problem with libraries PATH. It seems root gets the PATH correctly, but your user not. There is an environment variable to set this path, but I cannot rememebr its name , anybody out there can be more precise than me? Hi
Quoted I've posted a bug before In a KDE bug list or in your distro bug list? This seems a distro-related bug. BTW I had a similar problem some time ago with firefox, and after having spent a lifetime looking at it I discovered it was simply a firefox ill behaviour when the pemissions of its settings directory where "strange" (I mean different from its default). Hi
Quoted I think there is an option in KDevelop to force an additional console Yes, there is. Use menu->project->project options->debugger
Quoted Since the "feature" presisted across logouts. reboots. and shutdows It's restarted because when you stop Kde, its session manager records all running processes rooted after the kdeinit process. To be rid of Nautilus, you could disable kde session management, log out, log in again and then enable the session manager again. (Notice that all other processes restarted by Kde during login will not be restarted). Another way could be looking into Source code 1 <home dir>/.kde/share/config/sess...
Seems to me you have a Gnome app running, that loads the Gnome desktop, which in turn is hidden by Kde one. I noticed the same thing some time ago, when I used Nautilus inside Kde, but I never noticed it afterwards (it was kde 2.xxx if I'm not mistaken). Try looking at ps -aux for strange processes. Hi Antonio