Hello,
Yes, it is an OS level setting. A file is opened with an application
when it is dragged and dropped onto the Dock icon of that application
only if the Info.plist file of the application bundle includes the file
extension in the extension enumeration in the CFBundleTypeExtensions
key. You have to Ctrl + click on the oXygen icon in Finder, select Show
Package Contents, go into the Contents folder, edit the Info.plist file
and add the line
<string>html</string>
in the list of file extensions in the CFBundleTypeExtensions key, where
the xml and xhtml extensions are specified.
By default the html extension is not associated with oXygen in this way
because generally HTML is not XML.
Regards,
Sorin
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I cannot drag .html files either, but I can drag .xhtml files, so I
suspect that changing things in either the "File Types" or perhaps
the "Document Type Association" panes of the preferences would do the
trick.
Nope, changing the "File Type" setting did not seem to work. This
seems to be an OS-level thing. (Which, thinking about it, makes
sense.)
When I look at "Get Info" for a .html or .txt file, Finder does not
even list oXygen as a possible application I can choose to open it.
I'm guessing that my oXygen 9.1 has not told my Mac OS X 10.5.1 that
it knows how to open .txt and .html files.
_______________________________________________
oXygen-user mailing list
[email protected]
http://www.oxygenxml.com/mailman/listinfo/oxygen-user