Hi David,

If I type www.google.com/reader and assign it the alias 'Reader' it
will not be there if i close and reopen Do.

How are they saved?

Thanks,

Martyn

On Oct 7, 11:27 pm, "David Siegel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> No, aliases are saved.
>
> David
>
> On Tue, Oct 7, 2008 at 3:01 PM, Martyn <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > Alias works really well.... however, your aliases are not saved
> > between sessions. Is this right?
>
> > Thanks,
>
> > Martyn
>
> > On Oct 7, 7:54 pm, "Rick Harding" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > > There is an alias command you can use. So you might type out a url,
> > > and instead of selecting 'open url' you'd select alias and give it
> > > another name. Check out the wiki docs on alias. Not exactly the same,
> > > but should help.
>
> > > Rick
>
> > > On 10/7/08, tchomby <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> > > > Recently I've been using Enso (a keyboard-based launcher program
> > similar to
> > > > Do) on Windows and one thing I really love about it is that it makes it
> > > > really easy to build up your own vocabulary of custom commands, at
> > least for
> > > > opening things. For example, I went to google mail in my browser,
> > > > highlighted the URL in the URL bar, then launched Enso, selected the
> > 'Learn
> > > > as open' command, it asks me for a command name and I type gmail, now I
> > have
> > > > a new command in Enso: the command gmail will open gmail in my browser.
> > This
> > > > works with all sorts of things, such as files and folders, application
> > > > launchers, just select whatever it is, launch the learn as open command
> > in
> > > > enso, give it a name, and you have a new command that opens whatever it
> > was.
>
> > > > Does Do have a way of doing this already? It seems like a 'Learn as
> > open..'
> > > > plugin would be a simple one to write, but I don't have time so I'm
> > making a
> > > > request. I wonder if the concept could be extended somehow, beyond just
> > > > opening things?
>
> > > > In the shell, I can build up a list of custom commands by writing shell
> > > > scripts and keeping them in my ~/bin/ folder, which I have on my $PATH.
> > > > These scripts could also be picked up by some non-terminal launcher
> > > > programs, such as dmenu or gnome do. Then you could have a custom
> > command do
> > > > anything you want. Of course writing a shell script is not exactly
> > quick and
> > > > easy.
>
> > > --
> > > Sent from Gmail for mobile | mobile.google.com
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