On Thu, 2006-03-02 at 13:42 +0100, Dag Wieers wrote: > On Fri, 27 Jan 2006, Erik Grinaker wrote: > > Dag Wieers wrote: > > > One solution would be to allow for webdav access from within revelation, > > > so > > > I Can share my passwords wherever I have web-access. (But I still would > > > have > > > a problem when I donĀ“t have web-access) > > > > Revelation already supports webdav, as well as ftp, http, ssh, etc through > > gnome-vfs. Either try passing an url on the command-line, set up a server > > connection in nautilus and open it there, or do it via the file chooser > > (with > > Control-L). > > It works with the following syntax for the URI: > > dav://[EMAIL PROTECTED]/Path/file.rvl > > If I browse for the file in the open dialog, it failes to open the webdav > location (which is listed in the favorite places sidebar in the open > dialog). I get this error: > > Could not change the current folder to dav://[EMAIL PROTECTED]:80/Path: > dav://[EMAIL PROTECTED]:80 is not a folder > > But as I said, I can open the webdav location in Nautilus fine. SO one has > to actually make up the correct webdav URI to make it work. > Revelation probably could be improved with a "Use the current file" > button, so people can open the file from within nautilus, using revelation > and then say "Use this file as default" in the preferences.
Ok, I'll have a closer look at this - a "use current file" button would probably be useful. Thanks. -- Erik Grinaker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> http://erikg.codepoet.no/ "We act as though comfort and luxury were the chief requirements of life, when all that we need to make us happy is something to be enthusiastic about." -- Albert Einstein