Tag: desktop
Unity launchers
Unity Launchers are actually files stored in your computer, with a ‘.desktop’ extension. In earlier Ubuntu versions, these files were simply used so as to launch a specific application, but in Unity they are also used so as to create right-click menus for each application, which you can access from the Unity Launcher.
This article describes how to create a working .desktop file for general use, but also how to add it to the Unity Launcher and/or how to edit a Unity Launcher itself, by editing its fields or by adding a right-click menu to it.
Creating a working .desktop file
There are currently 2 ways of creating a desktop file. The 1st one is using a text editor, like Gedit, and the 2nd one is installing a program (gnome-panel) or using ‘alacarte’ that both do the job for you. The former lets you “control” your launcher more than the latter, but the latter way is easier. Please note that this section will cover only the basics, not how to add shortcuts to your launcher. For this, please head to Adding shortcuts to a launcher.
Using a text editor
Open your favourite text editor, like Gedit or nano, and type in (copy and paste):
[Desktop Entry] Version=x.y Name=ProgramName Comment=This is my comment Exec=/home/alex/Documents/exec.sh Icon=/home/alex/Pictures/icon.png Terminal=false Type=Application Categories=Utility;Application;
These lines are enough for describing a simple launcher. Each launcher (.desktop file) consists of some basic fields.
- Version is the version of this .desktop file.
- Name is the name of the application, like ‘VLC media player’.
- Comment is a phrase or two describing what this program does, like ‘Plays your music and videos files’.
- Exec is the path to the executable file. The full path to the executable file must be used only in case it isn’t in any of the paths specified in the $PATH variable. For example, any files that are inside the path /usr/bin don’t need to have their full path specified in the Exec field, but only their filename. To see all the paths in the $PATH variable you can open a terminal using Ctrl+Alt+T and type in
echo $PATH
- Icon field is the icon that should be used by the launcher and represents the application. All icons that are under the directory /usr/share/pixmaps don’t need to have their full path specified, but their filename without the extension. For example, if the icon file is /usr/share/pixmaps/wallch.png, then the Icon field should be just ‘wallch’. All other icons should have their full path specified.
- Terminal field specifies whether the application should run in a terminal window or not.
- Type field specifies the type of the launcher file. The type can be Application, Link or Directory, but this article covers the ‘Application’ type.
- Categories field specifies the category of the application. It is used by the Dash so as to categorize the applications. A launcher being a ‘Utility;Application;’ should be under the ‘Accessories’ section etc.
A realistic example of how a .desktop file looks like is the following:
[Desktop Entry] Version=1.0 Name=BackMeUp Comment=Back up your data with one click Exec=/home/alex/Documents/backup.sh Icon=/home/alex/Pictures/backup.png Terminal=false Type=Application Categories=Utility;Application;
One last thing to add is that by setting executable rights to your .desktop file, it automatically takes the specified Icon and Name (specified in the corresponding fields), as it should be. Be careful though, the filename doesn’t really change, it still remains ‘launcher_name_here.desktop’ and not ‘Name_field_here’, the system chooses to display it like ‘Name_field_here’ because it’s nicer without the .desktop extension.
Adding a .desktop file to the Unity Launcher
In order to add your launcher to the Unity Launcher on the left, you have to place your .desktop file at /usr/share/applications/ or at ~/.local/share/applications/. After moving your file there, search for it in the Dash (Windows key -> type the name of the application) and drag and drop it to the Unity Launcher. Now your launcher (.desktop file) is locked on the Unity Launcher! If your desktop file cannot be found by doing a search from the Dash, you may need to read on…
To be more certain that your .desktop file will work properly, use the desktop file validator, which will notify you of any errors or omissions. If there are no errors, desktop-file-validator will exit silently.
Once the file validates correctly, install it to the default location (probably /usr/share/applications) using the desktop-file-install program. This step may require superuser privileges. The desktop-file-install program may add some lines of its own to your .desktop file. There is no need to have the .desktop file be executable by anyone.
Please note that desktop-file-validate tends to be oversensitive at times, which means that it can output error messages on perfectly working .desktop files. Those error messages should be better seen as warnings rather than anything else. For more information on desktop entry specification please refer to http://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/
Ubuntu Unity .desktop
In order to add your launcher to the Unity Launcher on the left, you have to place your .desktop file at /usr/share/applications/ or at ~/.local/share/applications/. After moving your file there, search for it in the Dash (Windows key -> type the name of the application) and drag and drop it to the Unity Launcher. Now your launcher (.desktop file) is locked on the Unity Launcher! If your desktop file cannot be found by doing a search from the Dash, you may need to read on…
To be more certain that your .desktop file will work properly, use the desktop file validator, which will notify you of any errors or omissions. If there are no errors, desktop-file-validator will exit silently.
Once the file validates correctly, install it to the default location (probably /usr/share/applications) using the desktop-file-install program. This step may require superuser privileges. The desktop-file-install program may add some lines of its own to your .desktop file. There is no need to have the .desktop file be executable by anyone.
Please note that desktop-file-validate tends to be oversensitive at times, which means that it can output error messages on perfectly working .desktop files. Those error messages should be better seen as warnings rather than anything else. For more information on desktop entry specification please refer to http://standards.freedesktop.org/desktop-entry-spec/latest/
To create a simple custom .desktop
you will need to add these entries to a .desktop
file of your choice in ~/.local/share/applications/
nano ~/.local/share/applications/your_application_name.desktop
[Desktop Entry]
Name=the name you want shown
Comment=
Exec=command to run
Icon=icon name
Terminal=false
Type=Application
StartupNotify=true
For extra options for your .desktop file you can visit this site. All the options available are very well described there.
You can also copy a existing application’s .desktop file from /usr/share/applications/
to your ~/.local/share/applications/
and edit it to fit your needs.
ie: this will copy gedit .desktop file to the folder where the .desktop files should be saved for a user
cd ~/.local/share/applications
sudo cp /usr/share/applications/gedit.desktop .
After that open that location using nautilus ~/.local/share/applications/
and drag n drop the file you have just created to the Unity launcher.
Has an option instead of drag n dropping the file you can open dconf-editor (install it with sudo apt-get install dconf-tools
or look for it in the USC) and navigate to desktop.unity.launcher
and edit the key favorites by double clicking on the entries to the right of the key.
To add your custom launcher add it at the position you want with this format ‘/home//.local/share/applications/.desktop’. Don’t forget to respect the ,
and the spaces in that line and make sure that the line starts and ends with [
and ]
respectively.
With this method you will need to log off and back in for the change in favorites to take effect. This will make it appear in the dash