On Wed, 2007-01-31 at 07:36 -0800, Gerhard Magnus wrote: > Does Linux, or more specifically the Gnome desktop, have a widget like > the one in Windows that associates file extensions with applications > so that, for example, when I double-click on a ".txt" file it opens in > my favorite text editor? Do file extensions have any significance in > Linux? It looks like many things actually check the file type, but will fall back to using the file name, if it had no luck. Others have provided some answers as to how to change an association, or which one is the default. Right-clicking a file, bringing up the properties dialogue, allows one to change the "open-with" preferences for that type of file, presuming that something does distinguish that type of file from others. I've found plain text files to be a bit of problem. e.g. You might want VIM to open most of them, but a music player to open a playlist, by default. I had to manually add #EXT3MU to the top of the playlist files to get separate defaults for each. -- (Currently testing FC5, but still running FC4, if that's important.) Don't send private replies to my address, the mailbox is ignored. I read messages from the public lists.