Antonio Rodriguez wrote: > > Thanks, I will try that next. What is funny is that only the "debian box" > appears gray -I > have afterstep running-, and I can click on it: nothing happens. Any other > box is not gray, > has "something". I already tried dpkg -r <package>; apt-get install <same > package>, but > still no life to the gray box. I will see what happens. >
Ah; you're using AfterStep. I never could figure out how to use that wm ('course, I never bothered to read the documentation, either). I'm content with icewm, so I haven't experimented much with other wms. Okay, AfterStep users, can you help Antonio out here? > Kent West wrote: > > > Antonio Rodriguez wrote: > > > > > > Yes I do. I have installed several of them: icewm, fvwm, enlightenment, > > > afterstep,etc > > > > > > Pollywog wrote: > > > > > > > On Sun, 21 May 2000, Antonio Rodriguez wrote: > > > > > I got my Xwindows going with functioning mouse, the only problem is > > > > > that > > > > > I don't have any applications accessible from there, even xterm isn't > > > > > there! I suposse that it hapenned because I installed all the > > > > > applications first, and then only my Xsystem. How do I make them > > > > > visible > > > > > from there? > > > > > Thanks, > > > > > Antonio. > > > > I'm no expert, but here's a brief rundown of my understanding. > > > > Desktop icons are not part of window managers, but they are part of > > "environments", such as KDE or Gnome, so if you're looking for desktop > > icons, that's the direction to look. > > > > If you're wanting items on your menu, such as in icewm, there are > > definition files for each item. When packages are installed they place a > > menu definition file in /usr/lib/menu. SysAdmins can override these > > menus by placing new files in /etc/menu, and individual users can set up > > their own menus by placing files in ~/.menu. (See the README in > > /usr/lib/menu.) > > > > I would check /usr/lib/menu to see if there are any files in there. If > > not, then I figure you can do one of three things: 1) manually create a > > file for each menu item you want, 2) reinstall each package you want a > > menu item for, or 3) upgrade your system, and each package that is > > upgraded should create a menu item file. > > > > "menu-update" might have to be run in order to update the menus from the > > menu definition files, and you might have to restart your window manager > > to get it to see the new menu item. > > > > Again, I'm no expert, and I'm not positive that this is the way things > > work, but it might point you in the right direction. > > -- > Unsubscribe? mail -s unsubscribe [EMAIL PROTECTED] < /dev/null