Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted February 18, 2005 Guys! I want to know is there any way to delete or rename the Menu items (Program Menu as well as Desktop menu, when we Right-click on desktop) in GNome of Red Hat Linux 9.0? When i tried to delete a Program menu item, by right clicking on it & select "Delete", it showed ERROR message like "Can not found or something like that". I think that these items surely present in some directory, but in which? So that i can delete them or rename them. And can we rename desktop Menu items, like "Clean up by name" and others, which showed, When we right-click on desktop? Pls tell me! Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dacodecz 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2005 Guys!I want to know is there any way to delete or rename the Menu items (Program Menu as well as Desktop menu, when we Right-click on desktop) in GNome of Red Hat Linux 9.0? When i tried to delete a Program menu item, by right clicking on it & select "Delete", it showed ERROR message like "Can not found or something like that". I think that these items surely present in some directory, but in which? So that i can delete them or rename them. And can we rename desktop Menu items, like "Clean up by name" and others, which showed, When we right-click on desktop? Pls tell me! 26843[/snapback] Dear vishal, If you are using the gnome desktop then there is an utility named gconf-editor that you can use to change most of the settings, well if you feel like a geek today :-) then check "/etc/xdg" and all of its friends. Cheers ............ Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
Vishal Gupta 4 Report post Posted February 18, 2005 (edited) thnx for ur reply. But gconf-editor is also present as a menu named Configuration Editor in System Tools -> More System Tools. I hv used it a lot times but didnt find what i wanted? And there is no directory named xdg in /etc folder. Edited February 18, 2005 by Vishal Gupta Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dacodecz 0 Report post Posted February 18, 2005 thnx for ur reply.But gconf-editor is also present as a menu named Configuration Editor in System Tools -> More System Tools. I hv used it a lot times but didnt find what i wanted? And there is no directory named xdg in /etc folder. 26872[/snapback] Dear vishal, Are you sure there is no "/etc/xdg/menus" directory in ur installation?. Ok for raw handling of this issue do, "find / -path /var -prune -o -path /proc -prune -o -path /tmp -prune -o -path /mnt -prune -o -depth -type f -name \*.menu -print -o -name \*.desktop -print -o -name \*.directory -print | tee files.log" Now check the files.log for the files having extension {menu,desktop,directory}, I bet you will find lots of them, anyway for starting your tweaking journey you can focus on the ones you found in your $HOME directory, besides you can start from these files, [[[[[[[ applications.menu applications-merged/*.menu preferences.menu start-here.menu /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Root.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Settings.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Other.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/theme-method.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Accessories.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Games.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/font-method.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Internet.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/System.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Multimedia.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Applications.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Development.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Graphics.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Office.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Advanced.directory /usr/share/gnome/vfolders/Accessibility.directory ]]]]]]]]]]] Go through these documents if your intention is to customized the entire menu structure of your system. http://standards.freedesktop.org/menu-spec/latest/ http://standards.freedesktop.org/basedir-spec/latest/ http://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/ Hope this will help you solve your problem :-) Cheers .......... Share this post Link to post Share on other sites