Hi,
-Original Message-
From: ext Christian Neumair [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 26 June, 2007 14:19
To: Kost Stefan (Nokia-M/Helsinki)
Cc: xdg@lists.freedesktop.org
Subject: Re: xdg-mime query filetype|default
Am Dienstag, den 26.06.2007, 09:46 +0300 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
hi,
hi,
I see. Right now nautilus detects the file as application/octet-stream
while xdg-mime query filetype works as expected.
Stefan
-Original Message-
From: ext Daniel Leidert [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: 29 June, 2007 14:49
To: xdg@lists.freedesktop.org
Cc: Kost Stefan
Am Freitag, den 29.06.2007, 12:19 +0300 schrieb [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
[gnomevfs-info]
Is nautilus using the simple method too, or is it looking into the
files? Apart I currently kill nautilus to make it see the updates. Is
there some alternative - could it watch the files and re-read the
Hi,
Someone reported that in the current version of the spec, we say:
Desktop entry files are encoded as lines of 8-bit characters separated
by LF characters.
But UTF-8 characters can use several bytes for one character. We can
either just say lines separated by LF characters, lines of text
On Fri, 2007-06-29 at 18:37 +0200, Vincent Untz wrote:
Hi,
Someone reported that in the current version of the spec, we say:
Desktop entry files are encoded as lines of 8-bit characters separated
by LF characters.
But UTF-8 characters can use several bytes for one character. We can
The point of that formulation was to make clear that you can parse a .desktop
fils into individual lines, keys and value-blobs without concern for the actual
encoding used. Back in the days .desktop files could use different encodings
for different lines of the file, there was no single