On Fri January 20 2006 09:11, Sabine Konhaeuser wrote:
On Friday 20 January 2006 02:10, Joshua Raphael Fuentes wrote:
funny.. I never had that problem on my SUSE 10. But if those cases happen, it's always good to do a refresh on you KDE, or if not, you can always revert back to it's first run by deleting .kde inside your home. You will be left with defaults by then, so which means you will be spending time configuring and making adjustments to meet your desires.
Well, deleting .kde is not really an option for me, since I have way to many things configured the way I want it, and bringing it all back is just not something I want to deal with (unless it's absolutely necessary). Deleting single config files is a different thing though. The days when I didn't mind fiddling hours with my computer are gone ;-).
Cheers, Sabine
Well, the suggestion by Mr "sargon" is not entirely without merit. If you
learn which key files you "really" need (such as mail
settings/config/filters/etc and other basics like konq settings and
bookmarks, ad infinim) and move these key files over first one by one (or in
the case as something like kontact settings verses KMail settings - can move
most/all the KMail settings) then reboot and see if it fails/bad behavior
returns. I have had to any more than one occasion had to rename my .kde dir
to ~kde and then do just what he's suggested.
Also, sometimes clearing out the /tmp file helps with killing the simlinks
that are in the ".kde" dir in your $HOME/ dir. They are those
"socket-<hostname>" and "tmp-<hostname>" files. I usually don't mess with
the "cache-