On 04Oct2005 19:45, Dotan Cohen <dotancohen@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: | On 10/3/05, Toralf Lund <toralf@xxxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: | > Not sure that's really what he needs. I'd rather suggest doing | > gnome-open phonenumbers.xls | > (For the actual file open.) No manpage for this tool, I think, but it's | > probably described somewhere in the help system. | | Thanks, this is almost exactly what I am looking for. However, it uses | the gnome defaults. As I use KDE, I have only set up the KDE defaults. | Is there a KDE equivelent? The obvious kde-open file.txt does not | work. [ Disclaimer: I don't use KDE or Gnome. ] If you're running KDE, see if there's something on the desktop for configuration or settings. You want the handlers for the file types. With luck it will tell you what app it launches by default for each file type. I do not know if there's an equivalent to gnome-open that picks the "right" handler to run. However: note that your statement "I use KDE, I have only set up the KDE defaults" does not preclude you from using gnome-open. You may want fiddle your Gnome defaults tool. Nothing prevents you running a mix of Gnome or KDE (or, indeed, entirely "other") tools at the same time. Most command line users only deal in a few formats. For text we use a text editor (vi, emacs, pico etc). Things like a spreadsheet require a suitable tools. So I might type: gnumeric foo.xls or oocalc foo.xls to use one or another spreadsheet tool. Cheers, -- Cameron Simpson <cs@xxxxxxxxxx> DoD#743 http://www.cskk.ezoshosting.com/cs/ Almost nothing in Perl serves a single purpose. - Larry Wall in <199712040054.QAA13811@xxxxxxxx>