- cross-posted to:
- linux
- cross-posted to:
- linux
I like the Slackware approach of installing the kitchen sink by default. Disk space is cheap.
But I find that the cluttering of the menus in KDE is a bit annoying. I use search to start my applications, and a lot of the time I have to type almost the full program name to get to the app I actually use.
What’s the easiest way to hide a large number of programs from the menus, which is also easily reversible?
My first idea was renaming the .desktop files in /usr/share/applications to .hidden
But they seem to be recreated automatically.
Another idea was to copy .desktop files from /usr/share/applications to ~/.local/share/applications and then do:
printf "\nHidden=True" | tee -a ~/.local/share/applications/*.desktop
But I tried to add this manually with one test file and it didn’t seem to have any effect.
Is there a config file somewhere that specifies in which paths .desktop files are parsed?
Or is there a better way?
Thanks a lot, and happy slacking!
[Solved] Slackware comes with kmenuedit which can be accessed by right-clicking the app menu.
I use KDE and instead of hiding the apps I don’t use I set the ones I do as favourites so I have them all just one click away