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2010-10-16
, 15:16
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Posts: 199 |
Thanked: 156 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Holland
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#2
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2010-10-16
, 18:37
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Posts: 2,853 |
Thanked: 968 times |
Joined on Nov 2005
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#3
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The Following User Says Thank You to fpp For This Useful Post: | ||
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2010-10-24
, 10:17
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Posts: 199 |
Thanked: 156 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Holland
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#4
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2011-03-17
, 15:27
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Posts: 199 |
Thanked: 156 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Holland
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#6
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The Following User Says Thank You to Berserk For This Useful Post: | ||
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2011-04-04
, 20:51
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Posts: 199 |
Thanked: 156 times |
Joined on May 2010
@ Holland
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#7
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I was looking for some GConf keys, from which I didn't know the location, or its existence (needle in a haystack?). I just looked in directories that seemed to point the right way.
But then I became really tired of typing things like "gconftool -a /apps/osso..." and "gconftool --all-dirs /apps..." in Terminal over and over again.
Config Reader features:
- The main ingredient is "gconftool -R /" (that means: show all directories and keys, recursively)
- It saves all dirs/keys to an HTML file. Open it in a webbrowser and you have a great overview, quick browsing, plus search functionality
- Date format is adjustable
- Smoother graphics than Angryman!
Screenshots!
Start screen
Settings
"gconftool -R /" process
Save screen
Saving..
And yes, the car moves!
This is what the HTML file looks like:
Wallpaeper - Desktop background manager (in Extras!)
Config Reader - Export all Gconf to an HTML file + compare feature (Extras-testing)
Even though these programs are available for free, I would appreciate any donations
Last edited by Berserk; 2011-09-05 at 19:11.