![]() Now you should be able to open sublime by just typing “sublime” in the terminal… try it out… you can also right click on the desktop and click “run command”, type sublime and it should open it. ![]() download new packages and install them without using the console. **sudo ln-s /opt/Sublime\ Text\ 2/sublime_text /usr/bin/sublime ** Sublime Text 2 is a cross-platform code editor I only recently heard about, and I have to. Copy or cut that sublime folder and go for ROOT–>OPT and paste the folder there Find the extracted sublime text 2 folder (downloads usually, or wherever you extracted it) Open dolphin file manager in super user mode ** (kickoff application manager and type dolph in the search bar, it will show you “file manager - super user mode”) extract the file (right click -> extract here), now those files are the files we need, they are the “installed sublime” (like someone installed sublime and just copied the folder) download sublime Sublime Text - DownloadĢ. Added new commands Arithmetic, Rename File and View Package File to showcase new features. I managed to make sublime work as the default this way:ġ. On startup Sublime has been telling me there’s a new version available. Sublime Text 4 has been released, and contains significant. Seems like this guys don’t know what you are asking. I am a new user at suse, used Ubuntu for sometime (installed suse couple days ago) ![]() How do I set it as the default for certain files? When selecting properties for a file it’s not available as an option for default applciation. That might be why I can’t set it as the default text editor. I installed sublime text as an “ubstable package” since it’s not available in yast. You may have to do all the digging yourself… Never before heard of application…if the sublime forum can’t help, Sorry, like the others here i can’t offer a lot of help setting up a Particular application (like ‘sublime’ maybe) with a certain type ofįile (which is where you have to decide what are the “binaries” you Personal Settings > File Associations, wherein the user can associate a On my system there is a path like main menu > Configure Desktop. I don’t have much experience in gnome in the last ten years, and i’ve Those set up steps are normally done by the RPM used to install the ![]() Maybe it is not set up to do so in the gnome configs? > What do you think would cause the software to behave in this manner? Opening application “for certain files”, how would the system know whichĭo you want it to open all executable files? or all non-text files, or what? In your first post you say you want sublime set to be the default When you say “binaries” what do you mean exactly? open binaries in the nautilus browser menu. ![]()
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