Re: GNOME Settings Schemas - How are they searched for?

2016-10-24 Thread 宋文武
Pjotr Prins writes: > I installed the same version on Guix on top of Debian - but I use > i3wm. No dbus - so maybe that is the root of the problem? > GSettings search its 'gschemas.compiled' files under environment variable `$GSETTINGS_SCHEMA_DIR` and then under each

Re: GNOME Settings Schemas - How are they searched for?

2016-10-24 Thread Pjotr Prins
I installed the same version on Guix on top of Debian - but I use i3wm. No dbus - so maybe that is the root of the problem? Pj. On Sun, Oct 23, 2016 at 02:02:52PM -0500, ren...@openmailbox.org wrote: > Hello, > > I use gnumeric-1.12.31 on GNOME, and i don't have this problem. > > > I am

Re: GNOME Settings Schemas - How are they searched for?

2016-10-23 Thread rennes
Hello, I use gnumeric-1.12.31 on GNOME, and i don't have this problem. I am hitting a similar problem with gnumeric. Install latest, open spreadsheet, hit 'safe as' and you get: (gnumeric:1974): GLib-GIO-ERROR **: Settings schema 'org.gtk.Settings.FileChooser' is not installed (bit annoying

Re: GNOME Settings Schemas - How are they searched for?

2016-10-23 Thread Pjotr Prins
On Mon, Sep 26, 2016 at 01:35:04AM +0200, Danny Milosavljevic wrote: > > (gnome-ring:711): GLib-GIO-ERROR **: Settings schema > > 'org.gnome.Evolution.DefaultSources' is not installed > > (gnome-calendar:6793): GLib-GIO-ERROR **: Settings schema > > 'org.gnome.shell.calendar' is not installed >

Fw: GNOME Settings Schemas - How are they searched for?

2016-09-26 Thread Danny Milosavljevic
Hi, > I was not sure how to handle this properly. The package libring > provides a program 'dring', which is a daemon that, as far as I > understand, does all the communication with peers on the internet. So > in order to place a call, one first needs to run 'dring &' and then > start the

GNOME Settings Schemas - How are they searched for?

2016-09-25 Thread Danny Milosavljevic
Hi, > I was not sure how to handle this properly. The package libring > provides a program 'dring', which is a daemon that, as far as I > understand, does all the communication with peers on the internet. So > in order to place a call, one first needs to run 'dring &' and then > start the