On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 6:48 PM, Tim <[email protected]> wrote: > > On 02/05/14 08:11, Steve Ovens wrote: > > > > > > > > On Thu, May 1, 2014 at 6:05 PM, Tim <[email protected] <mailto: > [email protected]>> wrote: > > > > > > On 01/05/14 22:29, Steve Ovens wrote: > > > Hi All, > > > > > > I have spent some time looking into this but I can't find anything > definitive. I want to use the recently used files functionality, > > however it > > > always wants to open *everything* in gnome documents. This is a > problem because a lot of the files have passwords and moreover, I actually > > > want to *gasp* edit my files. In Arch I simply removed > gnome-documents (or didnt install it in the first place). However in Ubuntu > > Gnome, the > > > ubuntu-gnome-desktop gets removed when you remove gnome documents. > > Are you talking about the search results in the overview or > something else? > > gnome-documents search provider will open files with gnome-documents. > > nautilus search provider seems to open files with the last used > editor. > > > > > > So I am specifically talking about the ability to, from the > shell/activities menu, type into the bar and pull up your recently > used/accessed > > files. Right now I believe I am doing this via a plugin. I like the > ability to not have to open nautilus/take your hands off the keyboard to > > open documents > right these are the search providers and there are 2 that might provide > file results (nautilus and gnome-documents). Look carefully at the icon > in the Left hand column for the results you are clicking! > > You can disable the gnome-documents search-provider in > gnome-control-center 3.10+ search panel , or using dconf-editor to set: > org.gnome.desktop.search-providers disabled ['gnome-documents.desktop'] > > That way you will only get results from nautilus recently used > > Thanks, I had to use the dconf-editor method because I did not see anything in the GCC which had options I was looking for.
Cheers > > > > I am open to learning a new way of doing this > > > > > > > > Is there a way to actually disable, or otherwise tell gnome > documents I dont want to use it? Can I remove this file some how without > > removing > > > the gnome-desktop meta package? Why are these considered > dependencies? > > > > > gnome-documents used to be a hard dependency since it provides libgd > which some other things used. I think these days libgd is mainly used > > as a > > git submodule and staticcally linked into programs that require it. > > > Looking forward to your replies > > > > > > -- > > > Red Hat 6 Certified Engineer > > > Ubuntu Certified Professional > > > Novell Certified Linux Administrator > > > > > > > > > > > > -- > > Ubuntu-GNOME mailing list > > [email protected] <mailto:[email protected]> > > Modify settings or unsubscribe at: > https://lists.ubuntu.com/mailman/listinfo/ubuntu-gnome > > > > > > > > > > -- > > Red Hat 6 Certified Engineer > > Ubuntu Certified Professional > > Novell Certified Linux Administrator > > -- Red Hat 6 Certified Engineer Ubuntu Certified Professional Novell Certified Linux Administrator
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