Re: [gentoo-user] Something's messed up my mimetypes

2018-07-23 Thread Davyd McColl
Or, if you've gone the whole hog (like me), right-click an ISO in dolphin, choose "properties" and on the general pane, click "file type options". Here you can add / remove handlers and prioritize which one you would like by default. IIRC, this deals with mime types, so won't just affect

Re: [gentoo-user] Something's messed up my mimetypes

2018-07-23 Thread Peter Humphrey
On Monday, 23 July 2018 16:58:41 BST Wols Lists wrote: > While I appreciate it's a damn sight more powerful than Windoze's > braindead file extension system, it feels to me like mimetypes are a > rogue chainsaw sometimes ... > > How do I find out what mimetypes are associated with an application?

Re: [gentoo-user] Something's messed up my mimetypes

2018-07-23 Thread Franz Fellner
2018-07-23 18:58 GMT+03:00 Wols Lists : > How do I find out what mimetypes are associated with an application? > > I would just inspect the .desktop files We use Gentoo here so you know which package installed your application. for kate it's... kate ;) $ qlist kate | grep desktop

Re: [gentoo-user] Something's messed up my mimetypes

2018-07-23 Thread karl
Wol: ... > How do I find out what mimetypes are associated with an application? > Going the other way is a simple "System Settings" options, except that > (a) I don't have a clue what half these mimetypes are, and (b) I don't > fancy going through ALL of them one by one looking for the program in

[gentoo-user] Something's messed up my mimetypes

2018-07-23 Thread Wols Lists
While I appreciate it's a damn sight more powerful than Windoze's braindead file extension system, it feels to me like mimetypes are a rogue chainsaw sometimes ... How do I find out what mimetypes are associated with an application? Going the other way is a simple "System Settings" options,