On Tue, Sep 17, 2013 at 5:25 PM, Suvayu Ali <fatkasuvayu+li...@gmail.com> wrote: > Hi, > > On Tue, Sep 17, 2013 at 10:31:41PM +0200, Carsten Dominik wrote: >> >> On 17.9.2013, at 22:21, Suvayu Ali <fatkasuvayu+li...@gmail.com> wrote: >> > >> > I can consistently repeat this outside of Org. I am trying with >> > `dired-do-shell-command'. >> > >> > Steps: >> > 1) (dired-do-shell-command "xdg-open" nil '("file.pdf")), the script >> > runs and opens the pdf file. >> > 2) (dired-do-shell-command "xdg-open &" nil '("file.pdf")), this runs >> > the script too but the pdf is not opened. >> > >> > (I know the scripts run because I turned on debugging in the scripts) >> > >> > I'm assuming Org opens it asynchronously. What lisp function does Org >> > use? >> >> Org used start-process-shell-command, and this happens in >> org-open-file, which is called for links to a file in org-open-at-point. > > I need some feedback from users using different desktop environments. > What DEs do you use, Matt, Glyn? > > I am on XFCE. For me xdg-open calls the internal function (defined in > the script), open_xfce. Inside that function, exo-open is called. This > is XFCE specific. When I replace exo-open with say, evince, and open a > pdf file; start-process-shell-command works; with exo-open it doesn't. > I can repeat this for html files with Firefox. > > I would like to know if other desktop environments has the same issue: > kde-open (KDE) and gvfs-open (Gnome, Mate, etc). So to test, just open > a directory with pdf/odt/html files in dired and run either of them > asynchronously with &.
I'm running unity in Ubuntu 13.04, which still is sorta descended from gnome. Neither xdg-open nor gnome-open seems to work (if I'm doing this right in dired: navigate to a pdf/html file, type &, enter xdg-open). I have the feeling the problem is in emacs, org-open-file, or their interaction. It's definitely not in xdg-open/gnome-open themselves, as they work fine from the command-line with M-! . thanks guys, Matt > > Cheers, > > -- > Suvayu > > Open source is the future. It sets us free.