That's interesting, unfortunately there's no packaging at all for Debian-based distros 😭
KaKi87
The thing is : I want my laptop to never have sound when using speakers, but always when connecting anything, e.g. Bluetooth or HDMI.
So, I mute Built-in Audio Analog Stereo
, but I don't mute Turn It Up Wireless Speaker
: then, when I connect the latter, it has sound, but when I disconnect it, the former stays muted, therefore I never risk being surprised by sound.
Except, when I need to use HDMI, I actually have to unmute Built-in Audio Analog Stereo
because Digital Stereo (HDMI) Output
is considered to be the same item by Linux, therefore when I unplug it, it turns back to Built-in Audio Analog Stereo
but stays unmuted, which leaves me at risk of being surprised by sound.
The thing is : I want my laptop to never have sound when using speakers, but always when connecting anything, e.g. Bluetooth or HDMI.
So, I mute Built-in Audio Analog Stereo
, but I don't mute Turn It Up Wireless Speaker
: then, when I connect the latter, it has sound, but when I disconnect it, the former stays muted, therefore I never risking being surprised by sound.
Except, when I need to use HDMI, I actually have to unmute Built-in Audio Analog Stereo
because Digital Stereo (HDMI) Output
is considered to be the same item by Linux, therefore when I unplug it, it turns back to Built-in Audio Analog Stereo
but stays unmuted, which leaves me at risk of being surprised by sound.
Censurer plutôt qu'éduquer ? On ne ferait donc pas mieux que les autres.
I want a global shortut, that will open Dolphin if not already open, and focus the existing window then create a new tab if already open.
Nope, and I looked at dolphin --help
but there's nothing there
The "Keep a single Dolphin window" option doesn't work for Super-E.
It only works for third-party apps (e.g. "Show in folder" for browser downloads).
I wondered as well.
You're welcome !
Yeah, I'm not a fan of this, but I understand some people are. Thank you for the suggestion !
if none of the files were handwritten, they probably came from something
Yep, I thought about Flatpak, but no, those are actually located in /var/lib/flatpak/exports/share/applications
.
Turns out the files in ~/.local/share/applications
were generated when I'd use the Edit Application GUI for adding environment variables to apps.
So, I didn't loose any app, I just had to wait for them to reappear and then reapply the environment variables.
doesn’t cp error when trying to copy folders without the recursive flag?
Yeah it actually did, but I didn't think anything of it and just added the flag without thinking 😅
(Because I already forget it most of the time when I do intend to copy directories so I took the habit to mechanically press Home
then Ctrl-Right
then space
dash
r
...)
Normally only user customized ones go in there, maybe if you use hacky tools like appimage-manager or so they too
Well, turns out those were user customized ones indeed, but that I never wrote myself : for adding environment variables to an application, I'd right-click it in the start menu then Edit Application, which opens a GUI editor that actually writes into ~/.local/share/applications
.
So, luckily, I didn't loose any app : they eventually reappeared on their own and I only had to redo the customization.
Also, that made me realize that I can also use that same GUI to do the edit you suggested.
Hmm, I'm looking for the URL of their APT repository but I'm not finding it 🤔