Can I change the icon of an application?

Schmitt cv.schmitt at googlemail.com
Sat Oct 1 13:15:21 BST 2011



Hello Listers,

Is there not this way to change an icon with gimp ?
Do not delete the old icon.
after changing the old icon with gimp into an new icon,
right-click on the old icon then and open it with an editor of your choice.
In the editor you can see the entries of this icon.
Copy these entries and paste them into the attributes of the new icon.
(you need to right-click on the new icon too, and open it with an editor.
you see then that there the entries are missing. copy and paste the old 
entries
into the attribute-window of the new icon).

That is all, or not ?

Greetings.
Val.
cv.schmitt at gmail.com







Am 01.10.2011 06:26, schrieb Duncan:
> Dun Peal posted on Fri, 30 Sep 2011 21:23:22 -0500 as excerpted:
>
>> By copy-pasting the Konsole item in kmenuedit, I create a new item
>> "Konsole-2". I then clicked on its icon, and changed it from the black
>> miniature terminal to a new icon. I then saved and exited kmenuedit.
>>
>> In Kickstart, "Konsole-2" now appears under the "System" sub-menu, with
>> the new icon. When I click to launch it, the new icon bounces next to my
>> mouse cursor as its being launched. However, once it's fully launched,
>> the icon in the bottom panel (i.e. the "task bar") is the same old black
>> miniature terminal. In the task switcher (<Alt>-<Tab>) the old icon
>> reigns supreme, too. In fact I didn't see that the new icon took hold
>> anywhere, except in the launcher and during initial execution.
>>
>> Is there anything I forgot to do?
> Two possibilities, ensure that the various kde components have updated
> their info, and if that fails, we try a command-line option available to
> all kde apps.
>
> First, try running kbuildsycoca4.  SyCoCa takes the first two letters of
> each word from SYstem COnfig CAche, which is what it is, provided you
> think of "System" in the context of KDE, not in the context of the entire
> computer, where the kernel caches would be more correctly "system", and
> the config is in /proc and /sys, both memory-based pseudo-filesystems, so
> it's already cached in memory.  But back to kbuildsycoca.  What running
> it does is re-scan kde's umpteen text-base config files at both the
> system and user level, updating kde's sycoca, which caches that
> information in binary form.  kbuildsycoca then notifies running apps so
> they can recheck the info they get from ksycoca.  Obviously, I'm thinking
> that perhaps kde's task manager was still using stale info.
>
> If that doesn't do it, since the taskbar is part of plasma, and kwin
> controls the icon in the titlebar, try restarting them.  In krunner:
>
> killall plasma-desktop; sleep 2; plasma-desktop
>
> That's three commands, but entered as a single command-line.  (You can do
> the same thing with kquitapp, the kde-specific method, but I prefer the
> traditional GNU/Linux killall utility.)
>
> Then the same for kwin (doing the three-as-one wasn't really critical for
> plasma, but it's a bit more so for kwin, as without a window manager it
> can be difficult or impossible to focus the line to enter the
> resurrecting command, and you may have to either terminate kde and
> restart it or browse to and click on the kwin binary to start it, I've
> had to do that before, because mouse clicks worked but keyboard entry
> wouldn't, without a window manager to decide where the focus went):
>
> killall kwin; sleep 2; kwin
>
> Of course, the same effect should be had by simply restarting kde, if
> desired, rather than restarting individual components, or for that matter
> restarting the whole computer, if you want.  But it's still worth running
> kbuildsycoca4, since while it should update on kde restart, sometimes
> there's a bug and it doesn't until you do it manually.
>
> If that doesn't work, then it's time for the command line option.  To see
> this for yourself, start with the --help option that most commands
> (including but not limited to kde commands) offer when run on the command-
> line (in konsole, in this case).
>
> konsole --help
>
> Notice the --help-kde option for common kde options, and try it.
>
> konsole --help-kde
>
> Now, notice this line:
>
>   --icon<icon>              Use 'icon' as the application icon
>
>
> OK, so what you need to do now is go back to that new menu item you
> created and edit its command line, adding the --icon option.  AFAIK you
> can either use the full path, or if it's a normal icon in the scheme,
> just list it by name (the icon browser you used before lists the icon
> names, hover over them for a tooltip if they're cutoff) and I /believe/
> kde should just find it.
>
> FWIW, I've not actually tried this option before, myself, tho I just
> tried it now and it seems to do what you're after, only noted it reading
> the various help output.  (I don't even have a taskbar plasmoid
> configured as I have dual monitors so don't need it /that/ much, and I
> use tab-switching, desktop-grid, etc, when a window does get buried.  So
> I haven't verified that but I did test that the --icon set icon appears
> in the titlebar and in the tab-switcher.)  I didn't think the --icon
> option was going to be necessary before, thus my not mentioning it, but
> it looks like it may be necessary after all, if the problem isn't just
> stale data screwing things up.
>
> Meanwhile, for some rather interesting entertainment, notice this entry
> under --help-qt.
>
>    --reverse                 mirrors the whole layout of widgets
>
> Try adding that one to a few selected menu entries if you have friends/
> family that regularly use the computer, and watch their bewilderment as
> it changes the interface just enough...<evil grin>
>

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