On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 11:00:32 +0100 soraberri <421246@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> insightfully noted: S>Hi all S> S>maybe there is a simple to way to solve this nuisance but I didn't find S>it, maybe you could suggest me one: S> S>when I'm for example browsing through the filesystem as a non-root user S>and I open a text file wich I want to edit, change and save, how can I S>"su" to root in order to do it in the same graphical desktop enviroment? S>I mean: what is the equivalent to the su command for the desktop? ====================================== Once you find the file you want to edit, launch a terminal, su to root and then issue the command to open the editor of your choice. Once the editor is open (remember root is now running that editor) you can browse to and edit the file. As with most things Linux, there are a number of other ways to accomplish this (such as running the file manager as root, briefly). HTH, Mike -- "The man who views the world the same at 50 as he did at 20 has wasted 30 years of his life" --Muhammad Ali