On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 1:23 PM, Roberto Alsina <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Thursday 14 August 2008 16:37:16 Dog Walker wrote:
>> On Thu, Aug 14, 2008 at 6:47 AM, Jan Holthuis <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>> > Well, I really need to know if there's a way to do this. Maybe via DBUS
>> > or something like that...
>> > Can someone please help me?
>> >
>> > Thanks in advance,
>> > Jan Holthuis
>> >
>> > Am Sonntag 10 August 2008 15:10:17 schrieb Jan Holthuis:
>> >> Hi!
>> >> I was just wondering if there's a method to add a download to KGet.
>> >> Maybe something like this:
>> >> http://api.kde.org/4.x-api/kdenetwork-
>> >> apidocs/kget/html/classKGet.html#2cb901470443e9fdd5c4b703b6f97434
>> >>
>> >> Unfortunately, it seems that kdenetwork doesn't exist in PyKDE. Is (or
>> >> will) there (be) another way to do this?
>> >>
>> >> All the best,
>> >> Jan Holthuis
>>
>> I would like at dcop. kget has a addTransfers method which you may be
>> able to use via the dcopext module. Run kdcop to find the names
>> required. (kdcop wouldn't execute the addTransfers method when I tried
>> it because it didn't know what the KURL::list type was, but dcopext
>> does know.)
>
> I replied already but maybe it didn't show up: just call kget with the URLs
> you want to download as arguments in its CLI.
>
> It will add them itself.
>
[...]

When I use your method, Roberto, kget displays a dialog asking where
to store the downloaded file, then immediately starts to download it
(this when kget isn't already downloading something). What the OP
pointed to looks exactly like what is available through the dcop
interface.


-- 
I have seen the future and I'm not in it!
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