Am Sun, 1 May 2016 18:46:25 +
schrieb Jason Vas Dias :
> What format are those *.cfg files in ?
binary data,
you want to use eet --help on them.
eet -l $file # shows the keys
eet -d $file $key # extracts and decodes to stdout
-
On Sunday 01 May 2016 18:20:24 Jason Vas Dias wrote:
> This time, I stuck with the defaults for everything, including the
> focus "whenever the mouse enters a window" option .
>
> But this does not work.
> First, right clicking on the desktop produces a blue glow around the mouse
> cursor, no men
OK, I regained control of the mouse, by creating a new fresh user account ,
running Enlightenment for the first time as that user, and then copying over
the new ~/.e and ~/.elementary directories thus created to my real home
directory, having deleted them first.
I am beginning to suspect my 'rm -rf
thanks for the response, Mick! I just tried your instructions:
> The easier way is to shutdown enlightenment, remove ~/.e and restart
> enlightenment, which will recreate a default setup.
>
> After it all starts up with a fresh configuration, right click on the
> desktop and select Settings/Setting
On Sunday 01 May 2016 16:54:27 Jason Vas Dias wrote:
> Please, could anyone advise how to regain use of my left mouse button
> in Enlightenment ?
>
> After removing my ~/.e ~/.elementary and ~/.esd_auth files,
> and getting the initial setup menu at startup , and choosing
> the option that said s
Please, could anyone advise how to regain use of my left mouse button
in Enlightenment ?
After removing my ~/.e ~/.elementary and ~/.esd_auth files,
and getting the initial setup menu at startup , and choosing
the option that said something like 'click on windows to focus'
( because I found the d