[ Quoting some previous comments with ">" ]

> Because of that, Wine and associated applications (winecfg, wine uninstaller 
> etc.) cannot be started from the desktop menu

Wine in desktop menu
--------------------
AFAIK *Wine* itself could never be started from the desktop menu.  If at all 
this might be possible if you enable the "Virtual Desktop" in winecfg (but 
usually people are only interested in the Windows applications, not in seeing 
the Windows desktop).

There's wine.desktop, but this does neither start Wine itself, nor does
it add a launcher to the menu (NoDisplay=true).  It only makes native
file type associations, so it tells your system that it may start e.g.
an .exe *with* Wine.  For security reasons wine.desktop is not
"activated" in the packages, but only shipped as an example.

Quoting /usr/share/doc/wine/README.Debian.gz:

~~~~~
To enable system-wide support for .exe files execute the following
command (replace /usr/share/doc/wine with
/usr/share/doc/wine-development if you use wine-development):
$ sudo cp /usr/share/doc/wine/examples/wine.desktop /usr/share/applications/
~~~~~


winecfg and uninstaller in desktop menu
---------------------------------------
I just commented on that in 
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wine/+bug/1493044.  Please followup 
there.

If I start winecfg here from a terminal it has its icon.

/usr/share/icons/hicolor/scalable/apps/wine.svg is/will be shipped again
with src:wine 1.8.6-2 and src:wine-development 2.0~rc6-1



> launchers of the installed Windows programs are not being put in the right 
> (Wine) category

Not sure if I understand this correctly.  Maybe it's "just" working on
my Debian GNOME system.  Here if I install e.g. Steam for a fresh user:

Wine automatically creates the menu structure and creates an entry for
Steam there.

Accordingly the following files are created:

~/.local/share/desktop-directories:
wine-Programs-Steam.directory
wine-Programs.directory
wine-wine.directory

~/.local/applications/wine/Programs/Steam/:
Steam.desktop



> /usr/share/desktop-directories/wine-Programs.directory
> /usr/share/desktop-directories/wine-wine.directory
> Yes, these files do create a menu (sub)section for installed Wine programs.
> This is really useful for MATE, Cinnamon, XFCE and other non-GNOME/non-Unity 
> DEs.

But on these DEs the files in ~/.local are still created by Wine, right?
So it still works!?


> and Windows binaries cannot be run directly from the file manager
using development version of Wine.

True, due to security reasons your system will not know how to launch
e.g. an .exe, see above.

-- 
You received this bug notification because you are a member of Ubuntu
Bugs, which is subscribed to Ubuntu.
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1576326

Title:
  Xdg .desktop, .directory and mimetype files missing in the package

To manage notifications about this bug go to:
https://bugs.launchpad.net/ubuntu/+source/wine/+bug/1576326/+subscriptions

-- 
ubuntu-bugs mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-bugs

Reply via email to