← Back to team overview

unity-design team mailing list archive

Re: Pinning to the launcher more precisely than the application level

 

Yeah I know chromium CAN make application shortcuts but making a shortcut
on the desktop then physically moving it and then dragging it to the
desktop isn't exactly ideal.
Even when you do, the icons are horribly scaled and look a mess.

I doubt there would be any work on making this happen (with chromium)
unless it was made the default browser.
Though dragging links from any browser should present itself in the
launcher really.

On 13 May 2012 00:42, Gregory Merchan <gregory.merchan@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:

> On Sat, May 12, 2012 at 4:59 PM, shane lee <shaneymail@xxxxxxxxx> wrote:
> > It makes sense to me and there are times when I have wanted to pin a
> > document to the launcher that I'm working on.
> >
> > More than anything, I would love to be able to drag a tab from chromium
> to
> > the launcher and it would turn it into a web app or something.
>
> This already works for me:
> 1. Wrench menu->Tools->Create Application Shortcuts...
> 2. Make sure the shortcut will be on the desktop. (It's the default for
> me.)
> 3. Click "Create".
> 4. Move the created object (it's a .desktop file) to the place where
> you keep those things.
> 5. Drag it to the launcher and drop it when you see the plus sign.
>
> I'm actually using Chrome, and I don't know if there's a difference.
>
> Getting the launcher to accept a tab from Chrome or Chromium is really
> a matter of getting those to make the correct drag offer. I don't know
> that they actually bother with XDnD (the drag and drop protocol we all
> use) because tabs are only being moved around within the program.
>
> More generally, Nautilus could put files on the launcher by offering a
> .desktop file as the drag object. Nautilus would have to create that
> .desktop file, specifying the program to open and the actual file as
> an argument to it. To avoid breaking the launcher when you move the
> file, Nautilus would have to also make a hard link to it. It could
> keep both the .desktop and the hard link in some secret Nautilus
> directory.
>
> Cheers,
> Greg
>

References