The only time I have ever seen that is when from Enviroments tool you click on the "Directory" icon. This is because Environment doesn't have a Linux cross platform way to open a directory...so it just uses "nautilus" which was the default at some point in Ubuntu. So...whenever we can't find nautilus installed, it fails and shows that in the console.
I am discussing internally if we can find a uniform way of open a directory whatever tool it is in the distro.
I think 'xdg-open' is the most cross distro way.
Can you check?
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The only time I have ever seen that is when from Enviroments tool you click on the "Directory" icon. This is because Environment doesn't have a Linux cross platform way to open a directory...so it just uses "nautilus" which was the default at some point in Ubuntu. So...whenever we can't find nautilus installed, it fails and shows that in the console.
I am discussing internally if we can find a uniform way of open a directory whatever tool it is in the distro.
I think 'xdg-open' is the most cross distro way.
Can you check?
On Tue, Jun 25, 2019 at 3:02 PM Richard Sargent <richard...@gemtalksystems.com> wrote:
--This was the result of selecting one of the images from the list (the only image, in my case) and clicking on the folder icon.I am guessing Gnome is not installed.Installed desktops list?$ ls -l /usr/share/xsessions
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2573 Feb 17 2018 icewm-session.desktop
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 5465 Sep 21 2016 xfce.desktop
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The only time I have ever seen that is when from Enviroments tool you click on the "Directory" icon. This is because Environment doesn't have a Linux cross platform way to open a directory...so it just uses "nautilus" which was the default at some point in Ubuntu. So...whenever we can't find nautilus installed, it fails and shows that in the console.
I am discussing internally if we can find a uniform way of open a directory whatever tool it is in the distro.
I think 'xdg-open' is the most cross distro way.
Can you check?
On Tue, Jun 25, 2019 at 3:02 PM Richard Sargent <richard...@gemtalksystems.com> wrote:
--This was the result of selecting one of the images from the list (the only image, in my case) and clicking on the folder icon.I am guessing Gnome is not installed.Installed desktops list?$ ls -l /usr/share/xsessions
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 2573 Feb 17 2018 icewm-session.desktop
-rw-r--r-- 1 root root 5465 Sep 21 2016 xfce.desktop
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups "VA Smalltalk" group.
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Hi Richard,As Mariano noted, nautilus is just the default we use because we have not found a dependable, cross platform way to to this . That said, if you know what works on your particular OS, you can go to Setting and enter the name of a folder explorer that does work on your system.
Well, I can type in that field just fine on Linux Mint 19 and Redhat 7.4 (VA Smalltalk 9.1_x86 ) , but I do see that the file selection button does not update the field . I tried some of the other file selection buttons and they do work. I'll open case on this. So how do you get that setting changed ... good question! What distro are you running on?
Ubuntu 18.04
System Name : meteor
Kernel Release : Linux
Kernel Version : 4.15.0-45-generic
Processor : Intel(R) Core(TM) i7-6700K CPU @ 4.00GHz
CPUs : 8
CPU Speed (Mhz): 800.124
CPU Cache size : 8192 KB
Memory : 62994 MB
Shared Memory : 47245 MB
System Type : Whitebox