FSView"> ]> The &konqueror; Handbook &Pamela.Roberts; &Pamela.Roberts.mail; The &kde; Team Developers 2000 2002 &Erwan.Loisant; &Pamela.Roberts; &FDLNotice; 2013-07-02 &kde; 4.11 &konqueror; is &kde;'s advanced File Manager, Web Browser and Universal Viewing Application. KDE Konqueror Kdebase File Manager Browser Viewer &Pamela.Roberts; Overview &konqueror; is an advanced file manager for the &kde; Software compilation, providing file management functions ranging from simple cut/copy and paste operations to advanced local and remote network file browsing. Folder contents can be displayed in a variety of text and icon view modes, which can include thumbnail preview images of file contents. File and folder properties can easily be examined and changed, and applications launched with a simple click of the &LMB;. In &kde; SC 4 &dolphin; is the default file manger. To change the default component for browsing folders, open Default Applications in the &systemsettings; and select &konqueror; as file manager. &konqueror; is an HTML 4.01 compliant web browser with built in support for JavaScript (ECMA-262), CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) and bidirectional scripts (such as Arabic and Hebrew). It provides support for the secure running of &Java; applets, &Netscape; plugins for viewing &Flash;, &RealAudio; and &RealVideo; and SSL for secure communications. Advanced features include automatic &URL; and form completion, the ability to import bookmarks from other browsers and tabbed browsing. &konqueror; is also an excellent full featured FTP client. &konqueror; is a universal viewing application, capable of displaying images and documents without having to launch another application. It does this by embedding components (&kde; Parts) provided by other applications; from Gwenview; for image viewing, &okular; for PDF, &PostScript; and other documents. &konqueror; is a fully customizable application which anyone can configure to suit their own needs, from changing the overall style and the sizes of text and icons to selecting which items appear in the Menubar, changing the number and positions of the toolbars and even defining new shortcut key combinations. Different configuration profiles can be saved for easy recall as needed. &Pamela.Roberts; &konqueror; Basics Like all &kde; applications, &konqueror; is highly configurable. This document describes how &konqueror; behaves with the normal, default settings. A three button mouse can be useful when you are running &konqueror; or any other &kde; application. If your mouse only has two buttons then you should be able to set your system up so that you can simulate a &MMB; by pressing both buttons at the same time. You can read more about mouse usage in If you are used to having to double-click to perform an action, then take care, because in common with the rest of &kde;, &konqueror; defaults to single-clicking. Starting &konqueror; Being a combined File Manager and Browser, &konqueror; will automatically switch between the two modes as needed when it is running, but it is convenient to be able to choose which mode is to be used when you start it up. From the application launcher menu, select InternetKonqueror (Web Browser) to start it as a browser. &Alt;F2 will open &krunner;, enter a path to a folder and press &Enter; to start in file manager mode, or just enter a &URL; such as http://www.konqueror.org to start &konqueror; as a browser. Click on the black arrow to the right of the Home Page icon to switch to your Home Folder in the file manager mode and vice versa. If &konqueror; is the default file manager it also starts automatically when you left click on a desktop icon that represents a folder, such as a hard disk drive or the Trash icon. The Parts of &konqueror; A brief look at the main parts of &konqueror;'s window: Here's a screenshot of &konqueror; The Titlebar is the strip across the top of &konqueror;'s window, and operates in the same way as for other &kde; applications. Right click on the central portion to bring up the neat Titlebar menu. The Menubar is the strip containing the names of the drop-down menus. Left click on a name to alternately show and hide that menu, or use &Alt;the underlined letter in the name as a hot key, for example &Alt;E to show the Edit menu. The various menus are described in the Menubar section of this document. The Toolbar contains icons for commonly used operations. Left clicking on an icon will activate it. A brief description of what that icon does will appear when you hover the pointer over it. Some icons, for example the Up and Back icons in the previous screenshot, have a small black arrow at the right. If you click with the &LMB; at this arrow a small dropdown menu will appear. Right clicking on the Toolbar will bring up the Toolbar Settings menu which you can use to change the Toolbar's appearance and position. The Location Toolbar shows the path to the directory, &URL; or file being viewed. You can type a path or &URL; here and press &Enter; or left click on the Go icon at the right hand end of the Location Toolbar to go to it. The black icon at the right hand end of the Location Toolbar clears the text entry box. The Bookmark Toolbar is the area under the Location Toolbar in the previous screenshot. You can add frequently used bookmarks here; see the Organizing Your Bookmarks section of this document. The Window is the main area of &konqueror; and can show you the contents of a directory, web page, document or image. Using the Window menu you can split &konqueror;'s main window into one or more separate views, useful for drag and drop operations, or set it to contain two or more tabbed views. The Status Bar runs across the bottom of the &konqueror;'s window and often shows general information about whatever the mouse pointer is hovering over. If you have split the main window into a number of views you will get a Status Bar for each view, and it will include a small green light at the left hand end to show which is the active view. Right clicking on the Status Bar brings up the Status Bar Right Mouse Button Menu. Don't worry if your &konqueror; doesn't look exactly like this screenshot; it is highly configurable. In particular: You can use the Settings menu to choose whether to show or hide the Menubar, Main Toolbar, Location Toolbar and Bookmark Toolbar, or even to add an Extra Toolbar. If the toolbars are unlocked, you can also drag them to a new position by left clicking on the handle at the left hand end of a bar and move it around by holding the &LMB; down while you drag it. This screenshot does not show the optional Sidebar. For more details of how to change &konqueror;'s appearance, see the Configuring &konqueror; section Tooltips and What's This? You can find out a lot about how &konqueror; works without needing to read this entire document if you take advantage of Tooltips and the What's This? feature. When you hover the mouse pointer over a Toolbar or Sidebar tab button it should bring up a terse description of what that button does. What's This? is invoked by the Menubar HelpWhat's This? item or by &Shift;F1. It changes the cursor to show a question mark alongside the arrow. When this question mark is visible, a &LMB; click won't actually do anything until you have clicked on a control (or the text alongside it) that supports What's This?, in which case it will display a reasonably comprehensive description of what the control does. Most of the dialog boxes that &konqueror; brings up support the What's This? feature. <mousebutton>Left</mousebutton> and <mousebutton>Middle</mousebutton> Mouse Button Actions If you click the &LMB; on an item in &konqueror;'s window, it will be activated. Thus Left click on an icon in the Toolbar to perform the action that icon represents. Left click on an item in the Menubar to make that menu drop down. Left click on a menu item to do that thing. Left click on an icon in the Bookmark Toolbar to open that &URL;. Left click on a link in a web page to make &konqueror; follow that link. Left click on a folder icon or name and &konqueror; will descend into (show the contents of) that folder. Left click on a file name or icon and &konqueror; will do whatever it thinks appropriate, based on the file type. In general this means opening HTML pages, or previewing text, image or &okular; documents, showing them within &konqueror;'s window (Preview means that you can see the file but not change it). &konqueror; decides what the file type is by matching the filename extension against a list of known types. If that fails it tries to guess the type from the file contents. You can change the list of known file types and associated actions with the File Associations page of the SettingsConfigure Konqueror... dialog. Clicking the &MMB; on a file or folder name or icon does essentially the same as left clicking except that it usually does it in a new &konqueror; window, unless the Open links in new tab instead of in new window box has been checked in the General page of the SettingsConfigure Konqueror... dialog. &konqueror; can open links on pages and Bookmarks, as well as the Home, Up, Back and Forward entries in a new tab or window. Holding the &Shift; key down while pressing the &MMB; will open the link in the background. <mousebutton>Right</mousebutton> Mouse Button Menus Clicking the &RMB; on almost any part of &konqueror;'s window will bring up an appropriate context menu. If you have enabled the Right click goes back in history option in &konqueror;'s configuration settings a simple right click is equivalent to clicking on the Back button. In this case you can access the context menu by moving the mouse with the right button held down. On the Titlebar Right clicking on any free area of the Titlebar brings up the Titlebar Menu, allowing you to control the position of &konqueror;'s window as well as the decoration applied to all &kde; program windows. On the Main Toolbar Right click on any free area of the Toolbar to bring up the Toolbar Menu. You can use it to control whether the Toolbar is at the top, bottom, left or right of &konqueror;'s window. You can also use the Toolbar Menu to set the size of the buttons on the Toolbar, and whether they are shown as icons, text or both. On the Location Toolbar Right click in the &URL; entry box area to perform Cut, Copy, Paste or Clear operations in this area, or to change the automatic Text Completion features. Within a View If you right click on any free area of a view then you will get a menu that contains, among other options, the Up, Back, Forward and Reload navigation commands. On a File or Folder This is a most useful feature. Right clicking on the name or icon of any file or folder not only selects that item but also brings up a menu allowing you to Cut, Move, Copy or Remove the item in various ways, open it with the program of your choice or preview it, rename it, or edit the file type or properties. On the Status Bar Right click on the Status Bar at the bottom of a window or view to add or remove a view within &konqueror;'s window. Viewing Help, Man and Info Pages You can view &kde; Help and &UNIX; Man and Info pages directly in &konqueror;, without having to start up KHelpCenter. To view a &kde; Help page, enter help:/application name (for example help:/kmail to view the &kmail; documentation.) into &konqueror;'s Location Toolbar window. If you want to read &UNIX; Man pages &konqueror; makes it easy. For example type man:/touch or #touch into the Location Toolbar to see the page for the touch command. To browse through &UNIX; Info pages, entering info:/dir takes you to Info's top level directory, then it's just a matter of clicking on the right links to find the page you want. Alternatively, use info:/command name to go straight to the Info page you want. Unfortunately, &kde; Help pages are stored in such a way that they cannot be viewed in other browsers. If you really need to do this your only recourse is to go online and visit http://docs.kde.org. &Pamela.Roberts; &konqueror; the File Manager Folders and Paths In &UNIX; and &Linux; all folders are arranged in a simple hierarchy. Starting from a top level folder (also called the root directory), the structure descends and branches containing various files and subfolders. This means that you can get from any folder to any other by going up until you reach a common point then down through the appropriate subfolders until you reach your target. The position of any file or folder in the structure (also called a directory tree) can be described by its path, which is a simple list of the folders you would have to descend through to get to the target folder or file. For example /home/pam is the subfolder pam of the subfolder home of the top level folder, and /home/pam/words.txt is the file words.txt in that subfolder. The leading / in these paths represents the top level folder. Every folder accessible by your system — including those on other hard disk partitions, a USB device or &CD-ROM; — will appear in the tree descending from /, their exact paths will depend on how your system was set up (see also the section on Removable Devices). Every user on a &UNIX; / &Linux; system has their own home folder to hold their personal files and settings; for example /home/john and /home/mary. The symbol ~ is often used to represent the user's home folder, so that ~/letter.txt refers to the file letter.txt in my home folder. Note that the term directory is often used instead of folder. View Modes In File Manager mode, &konqueror; lists which files and subfolders are contained within a given folder and can provide you with some information about them. The path of the current folder is shown in the Location Toolbar. The way that &konqueror; displays the files and folders depends mainly on your choice of view mode which can be selected from the ViewView Mode sub menu. The view modes &konqueror; provides are outlined below. In File Manager mode, &konqueror; uses an embedded &dolphin; component. In the Icons view, which is the default, files will be represented by an icon that visualizes the file type, and a folder icon will be shown for subfolders. The names of folders and files, and the items enabled in ViewAdditional Information, are displayed below the icons. The Compact view shows the folder contents as icons with the name beside it and the items enabled in ViewAdditional Information below the name. The items are grouped in columns similar to the Short View in the &kde; file dialog. In the Details view, the folder contents are displayed as a detailed list which contains the name, size and last modification time of each item. Additional columns can be added by clicking a column header with the &RMB;. In the context menu of the header line you can choose between custom or automatic column width. Automatic width adjusts the width of all columns once to display the longest item in the column completely, except for the Name column where the extension is replaced by ... The order of columns can be changed by drag and drop of column headers, except for the Name header, which is always the first column in this view. The details view allows you to view the current directory in a tree-like fashion if Expandable folders are enabled: Each subfolder of the current folder can be expanded or collapsed by clicking on the > or v icon next to it. Grouped View Grouped View All view modes support grouping by the sort type selected in ViewSort by File Tip Info Checking the Show tooltips box in the File ManagementGeneral page of the &konqueror; Configuration dialog causes a small pop up information window to appear when the mouse pointer is hovered over a file or folder name or icon. File Previews The Previews tab of the File Management General settings page lets you enable file previews for certain types of file. Generally this means that the file's icon will be replaced by a small image showing the file contents. Because &konqueror; has to read much more data than just the file name to generate a preview, file previews may not be appropriate when viewing files from a remote system. To disable previews for remote files where reading the extra data would take too long set a file size limit at the bottom of the Previews tab. Information in the View In all view modes &kappname; shows at least an icon and a name for each item. Using Additional Information in the View menu or the context menu of the header in Details mode, you can select more information for each item to be shown: Size, Date, Type, Rating, Tags or Comment. Depending on the file type, additionally, sorting criteria can be selected: Document: Number of words and lines Image: Size and orientation Audio: Artist, album, duration and track The Other submenu allows to select Path, Link Destination, Copied From, Permissions, Owner or User Group. Folder View Properties The following settings control how the contents of a folder are displayed in the &kappname; view, and are stored on a per-folder basis by default: The view mode (Icons, Compact, Details) The sorting of items, which is determined by the sort order (ascending, descending) and the attribute (such as name, size,...) that the items are sorted by Sorting of folders and files – are folders shown first or not? Previews – are they shown instead of icons (based on the settings made in Previews tab of &kappname;'s General settings) or not? Are items shown in groups in the views? Are hidden files shown? What additional information (besides the name) is shown in the Icons or Details view? The view properties can be configured in the View menu, some (such as the view mode) can also be changed using toolbar buttons. The View Properties Dialog Screenshot of the View Properties dialog The View Properties dialog. The View Properties Dialog. The View Properties dialog can be used to quickly modify several view properties at once. This is done for the current folder, for the current folder including all subfolders, or even for all folders, depending on the choice made in the Apply View Properties To section. If Use these view properties as default is enabled, the chosen view properties will also be used for all folders which do not have customized view properties yet. Navigation To get to a file with &konqueror; you first need to navigate through the folder tree to find the folder containing that file. To move between folders you can simply step up and down the tree: To descend into a subfolder left click on its name or icon -- or if you have already selected it (see below) -- then just press &Enter;. To go up the folder tree you can click on the Up button in the Toolbar, use&Alt;Up, or use the Menubar GoUp option. To select a file or folder in the displayed folder without opening it in any way use the up and down arrow keys to move through the items. The selected item will be highlighted and some information about it will be displayed in the Status Bar. Setting the View Mode to Details can help you locate folders in the tree below the current folder; in this mode each folder is shown with a small box at the left. If the box contains a > sign, left clicking on the box (not on the folder name or icon) will display a sub tree showing files and subfolders contained in that folder. The small box will then change to show a v sign. Left click on that to collapse the sub tree. Once you have found the folder you are looking for, left click on the folder name or icon to open it. The Sidebar can also help you find your way around the file system. You can go directly to any folder by switching with FileOpen Location or &Alt;O to the Location Bar and typing its path. &konqueror;'s Text Completion feature may be useful when you do this. Don't forget that in &Linux; / &UNIX; file and folder names are case sensitive. When you have moved to a new folder you can go back to your previous choice by using the Toolbar Back button, the Menubar Go Back item, or &Alt;Left. Once you have gone back you can go forward. Use the Toolbar Forward button, the Menubar Go Forward item or &Alt;Right. Alternatively, you can also choose to enter the parent folder by clicking on the Toolbar Up, the Go Up item, or with &Alt;Up. Click the checkmark at the right of the toolbar Up, Back or Forward buttons or selecting these items in the Go menu brings up a submenu of recently visited locations. Finding Files and Folders If you don't know or can't remember where a file or folder is within your system, then use the shortcut &Ctrl;F or the Menubar ToolsFind File... option. This starts the file finder application &kfind;. See the &kfind; Handbook for help in using &kfind;. If the name of a file or folder begins with a period (dot), then it is a hidden file or folder, and will not normally be shown by &konqueror;. To see hidden files or folders use the Menubar ViewShow Hidden Files option. Another reason &konqueror; may not show the file or folder you are looking for is that you may have the View Filter plugin set to display only certain types of file. Removable Devices Any removable device (USB stick, floppy disk, &CD; drive or other hard disk partition that you have on your system) will usually appear in the / , /media, /mnt or /auto folder, having a path something like /mnt/floppy or /cdrom. The details will depend on how your system was set up. &UNIX; / &Linux; requires that you mount a removable device when you have inserted it into the drive, and mount other hard disk partitions when you want to access them. You also need to unmount a removable device before removing it to register that it is no longer available. How you do this will depend on your system setup: Using the Device Notifier In a &kde; session the Device Notifier window will popup, when you insert a removable device and allows you to select an appropriate application for this media or only mount the device. If you use the Folder View layout for your desktop you may have icons for removable devices on your desktop, in which case &LMB; click on the icon to mount it. Doing this should also bring up a &konqueror; window showing the contents of the device. To unmount, right click on the icon and choose the Unmount item. Visit the section Create New... in this Handbook to see how to create such an icon. Or you can do it the traditional way by typing into a text console window: mount /mnt/floppy to mount, for example, the floppy drive, and umount /mnt/floppy to unmount it (umount not unmount). Rather than having to open a text console to type the mount or umount commands, you may prefer to use &konqueror;'s ToolsExecute Shell Command (&Ctrl;E) feature. Deleting Files and Folders &konqueror; gives you two ways to dispose of an unwanted file or folder: You can move it to the Trash folder, which is the safest method as you can get it back if you realize that you have made a mistake. You can just plain Delete it, which removes the entry from the folder and adds the disk area occupied by the file(s) to the system's list of free disk areas, in the same way as the rm command. If you want to use this feature check the option Show 'Delete' menu entries which bypass the trashcan on the File Management settings page. The simplest way to remove a file or folder is to position the mouse pointer over its name or icon and press the &RMB;, which will bring up a menu containing the options Move to Trash and Delete. Or, if you have selected the item, the Menubar Edit menu will give you the choice of Move to Trash and Delete options. Del will move the selected item or items to Trash. &Shift;Del will really, truly and irrevocably delete the selected item or items. You won't be able to remove a file or folder if you don't have the necessary permissions. Moving and Copying To copy a file or subfolder between folders you can: Position the mouse pointer over its name or icon and hold down the &RMB;, which will bring up a menu containing the Copy option. Choose that. Or if the item is selected you can use the Copy button on the Toolbar or the Menubar Edit Copy item, or the &Ctrl;C shortcut key combination. You can also select multiple files or folders to copy/move as well. Navigate to the folder you want to copy the item into then Paste the item into the new folder by using the Toolbar Paste button or the Menubar Edit Paste option or the &Ctrl;V shortcut, or by moving the mouse pointer to a clear area of the window and holding the &RMB; down to bring up a menu containing the Paste option. Moving a file or subfolder between folders can be done in the same way as copying, except that you choose the Cut option or &Ctrl;X instead of Copy. The item that you have Cut will be removed from the original folder when you do the Paste into the new folder. You can also copy or move selected item(s) to another folder by selecting Copy To or Move To from the context menu you get when you right click on a file or folder name in the File Manager window. To enable this feature select Show 'Copy To' and 'Move To' commands on the File Management Services page of the settings. You may not be able to copy or move a file or folder if you don't have the necessary permissions. Using Drag 'n Drop &konqueror; also supports Drag and Drop copying and moving of files and folders. You can do this by having two instances of &konqueror;, one showing the folder you want to copy from, the other showing the target folder. Position the mouse pointer over the item you wish to copy or move, then, holding the &LMB; pressed, drag it to a clear space in the target folder. Release the button and you will be presented with a menu choice of Copy Here, Move Here or Link Here. Take care to drop the item into an empty area of the target folder view - dropping it on top of a subfolder will copy or move the item into that folder. You can also set up &konqueror; to show more than one folder within its window and drag & drop between them. Split Views for Drag & Drop This screenshot illustrates the use of the Menubar Window Split View Left/Right option, also available with the shortcut &Ctrl;&Shift;L, to split the main &konqueror; window into two views, each showing the contents of a different folder. To be able to show different folders in each view they should not be linked; the little boxes at the bottom right of each view should be empty. The active view, that is the one whose path is shown in the Location Toolbar and which responds to navigation and Menubar commands, is shown by the little green light in the bottom left corner. To make a view active, left click on an empty area of the view or on its Status Bar. To remove an active view from &konqueror;'s window use the &Ctrl;&Shift;W shortcut, or the Menubar WindowClose Active View option, or &RMB; click on the Status Bar and choose the Close View option from the resulting menu. If you use &konqueror; tabs, you can drag and drop between tabs by dragging the file to the tab label, without letting go yet. The destination tab will pop to the front, allowing you to continue dragging and then to drop the file. Duplicate File or Folder Names If you try to paste a file or folder into a folder that already contains an item with the same name, &konqueror; will pop up a dialog box warning you that the item already exists. You can then choose to: Cancel the paste operation by pressing the Cancel button. Give the item that is being copied a different name. You can do this by typing a new name into the text entry box or get &konqueror; to Suggest New Name. When you have done this press the Continue button. If you have copied multiple items, Skip the current item. The Apply to All button can be used if you have copied multiple items. Selecting Items in the View There are several ways to select items in the view. Once a group of items is selected, all actions, such as Cut, Copy, Move to Trash, and drag and drop operations, affect all selected items. Selecting Items Using the Mouse You can press the &LMB; somewhere in the view and draw a rectangle around a group of items before releasing the button. This will select all items in the rectangle and clear the previous selection. If the &Shift; key is pressed during the selection process, the previous selection is kept. If the &Ctrl; key is pressed while an item is clicked with the &LMB;, the selection state of this item is toggled. If the &Ctrl; key is pressed while a rectangle is drawn around a group of items as described above, the selection state of all items in the rectangle will be toggled. If the &Shift; key is pressed while an item is clicked with the &LMB;, all items between the previous current item and the clicked item will be selected. If Show selection marker is enabled in the Behavior tab of the File Management General section of the settings, a small + or - button appears in the top left corner of the item which is currently hovered over with the mouse. Clicking this sign selects or deselects the item, respectively. Selecting Items Using the Keyboard If an arrow key, Page Up, Page Down, Home, or End is pressed, the new current item is selected, and the previous selection is cleared. If the &Ctrl; key is held while one of the above keys is pressed, the selection remains unchanged. If the &Shift; key is held while one of the above keys is pressed, all items between the previous current item and the new current item will be selected. If &Ctrl;Space is pressed, the selection state of the current item is toggled. &Ctrl;A selects all items in the view. &Ctrl;&Shift;A toggles the selection state of all items in the view. Select a file or folder by typing the first few letters of its name and the first matching item is selected. To clear the selection and cancel the keyboard search press &Esc; or wait longer than the timeout of 1 second. Selecting Items Using the Menu You sometimes want to delete, copy or move a number of files that are similar in some way. For example you may wish to move all of the .png graphics files from one folder to another. &konqueror; makes this easy by letting you select multiple files based on similarities in their file names. Use the Menubar EditSelection Select Matching Items... option or the shortcut &Ctrl;S. This brings up a little dialog box in which you enter a filename containing the wildcard characters *, which matches any number of characters, and ? which matches a single character. Press OK and &konqueror; will highlight all files with matching names. For example: flag*.png will select all filenames starting with the letters flag and ending with .png. memo?.txt will select memo1.txt and memo9.txt but not memo99.txt. When you have selected a range of files, you can narrow down the selection by using the Menubar EditSelection Unselect Matching Items... option to specify which of the selected files should be removed from the selection. Use the Menubar EditSelection Unselect All option or just &LMB; click on a clear area of the view to cancel the selection. You can even invert the selection: that is, deselect all selected files and select those that were previously unselected. Use the Menubar EditSelectionInvert Selection option or &Ctrl;&Shift;A to do this. Create New When &konqueror; is in File Manager mode, picking Create New from the Edit menu or from the context menu you get by &RMB; clicking on a free area in a folder view gives you a submenu letting you create any of the following in the current folder: Folder... An easy way of creating a new (sub)folder. Text File... Use this to create an ordinary, empty, text file. A dialog box will be opened for you to enter the name of your new file. HTML File... Creates a skeleton HTML source file. When you type the new file's name into the dialog box it is probably best to give it a .html extension to avoid confusion. Type of Document Document... Depending on the installed applications and file associations several menuitems for different types of documents are displayed and enable you to create skeleton documents of the selected type. Link to Location (URL)... This lets you create an icon to open &konqueror; at a particular folder or web page. As with Link To Application... you can make the application icon appear on your desktop by creating the link in your ~/Desktop folder or going to the Create New... sub menu by right clicking on a free area of the desktop. Basic link to file or directory... Create a symbolic link for local files or folder. Link to Application... This option is most useful if you want to create an icon that will open a particular application. It opens a dialog box with several tabbed pages. The first, General, is where you choose an icon and the text that will appear with it. The second page, Permissions, lets you select who can use or modify the icon. In the Application page you must enter the Command that will run the application, for example, kwrite to start up the &kwrite; text editor. kwrite /home/pam/todo.txt would open the file /home/pam/todo.txt in &kwrite;. Advanced options such as the file types which the application can open are also available from this page. To make the application icon appear on your desktop, create the link in your ~/Desktop folder (this may be called something slightly different depending on how &kde; was installed on your system) or get to the Create New... sub menu by right clicking on a free area of the desktop instead of within &konqueror;'s window. If you have a lot of specialized application links and don't want to clutter up the desktop, then why not create them in your Applications folder. You can get there in &konqueror; by choosing Go Applications. Then create a single icon on your desktop to open your Applications folder, which is usually in ~/.local/share/applications. To put an application link icon into the panel, first create it in the Applications folder then drag the icon onto a clear area of the panel. Link to Device Use the options in this submenu to create an icon that will mount a device and open an instance of &konqueror; showing it's contents. To unmount the device when you have finished with it right click on the icon and select Unmount. However, in most cases you will want to create the icon on your desktop. Changing Names and Permissions The two easiest ways to change the name of a file or folder is to either right click on it and select Rename, or select the file or folder and then press the F2 key. To change the name or permissions of a file or folder right click on its name or icon and select the Properties item, or if you have selected the file or folder, then you can use the Menubar EditProperties (&Alt;Return) option. This will bring up the Properties dialog box with several tabbed pages: General, which gives you some information about the item and lets you change its name and, for a folder, the associated icon. Permissions, which shows you the item's ownership and access permissions and lets you change the permissions. Copy and Rename If you want to make a copy of an existing file with a different name -- perhaps as a backup -- in the same folder as the original file, do a normal Copy then when you Paste it a dialog box will pop up complaining that the file already exists. Just type the new name into the dialog's text box and press the Continue button (or if you are feeling lazy pressing the Suggest New Name button will generate a new name for you). Configuring File Associations &kde; provides many applications which can open many different types of file. Most of the time, the defaults will work with no problems, but &konqueror; provides a powerful system to allow you to change the applications used to open each file type. For more details, choose the SettingsConfigure Konqueror... menu item, select File Associations in the configuration dialog, and click on Help. At the Command Line Although &konqueror; is a very powerful and flexible GUI file manager, there are occasions when the experienced &Linux; / &UNIX; user wants to get down to the basics and work at the text command line level. You can, of course, open an instance of &konsole;, perhaps with &konqueror;'s Menubar ToolsOpen Terminal option or with F4. If you only want to launch a program or view a &URL;, the ToolsExecute Shell Command... (&Ctrl;E) option may be easier. ToolsExecute Shell Command... (&Ctrl; E) opens a small command line dialog window where you can enter a shell command such as ps -ax | grep kdeinit . Note that it does not support full featured terminal control characters, so applications such as top and less will not work properly, but it is available immediately without the delay involved in starting &konsole;. For more complex operations, &konqueror; has another nice feature: the Menubar SettingsShow Terminal Emulator option, which opens up a terminal window as a new view within &konqueror;. As long as the link icon is visible at the bottom right corner of each view, the terminal will follow any folder changes you make in the normal file manager view. Including the terminal emulator &Pamela.Roberts; &konqueror; the Web Browser Browsing www.konqueror.org Connecting to the Internet Once you are connected to the Internet you can use &konqueror; to browse the Web just as easily as you can use it to handle your local files. Just type a &URL; into the Location Toolbar window, press &Enter;, and you are away! If you use a dial-up modem connection, then you will be using &kppp; or a similar dialer program to make the connection. If your machine is connected to a local area network (LAN) that gives you a proxy connection to the Internet then you will have to set &konqueror; up for the proxy connection. This can be done with the Web Browsing Proxy page of the SettingsConfigure Konqueror... dialog. If you are lucky enough to have a high speed cable connection, then the service provider will probably give you an external cable modem which needs an ethernet connection to your machine. Unfortunately the details of how to establish the connection depend on the service provider and to some extent on which Linux/&UNIX; distribution you are using. Some ISPs connect their customers to the Internet through a proxy server, in which case you will have to set up &konqueror; to use it. You may find it useful to search the archives of your distribution's user group mailing list for help. An error message such as Unknown Host usually means that &konqueror; cannot find a connection to the Internet or that you have entered an incorrect &URL;. Surfing and Searching Once you have a connection to the Internet, you can surf with &konqueror; just as you can with any other browser. Type a &URL; into the Location Toolbar window, press &Enter; or left click on the Go button at the right hand end of the Location Toolbar, and &konqueror; will download and display that page. If you have visited the page before, &konqueror;'s Automatic Text Completion feature can help you type the &URL; a second time, or you could look through the History page in the Sidebar. If you want to use one of the web's search engines, &konqueror;'s Web Shortcuts feature can make this easier. Left click on a link in a page to open that link. To open a link in a new instance of &konqueror;, leaving the old page still visible, &RMB; click on the link and select the Open in New Window option. Alternatively, you might want to Open in New Tab. Tabbed Browsing will let you hold a number of pages in one &konqueror; window and quickly switch between them with a single mouse click. You could also select multiple view modes with Window Split View Left/Right (&Ctrl; &Shift;L) / Window Split View Top/Bottom (&Ctrl; &Shift;T) option which will let you see different pages at the same time. This can be useful if you are looking through a complicated set of HTML pages, but make sure the little link box at the bottom right hand corner is empty when you are doing this. To go back to the previous page use the &Alt;Left shortcut, the Back button on the Toolbar, or the menubar Go Back option. Similarly, once you have gone back you can go forward by using &Alt;Right, the Forward button, or the menubar Go Forward option. There are multiple ways of scrolling the viewing area. One is to use the Up Arrow and Down Arrow keys. You may also use the scrollbar, your mousewheel or the Page Up and Page Down keys. If you want to read a long webpage use the automatic scrolling feature of &konqueror;. Start automatic scrolling with &Shift;Down Arrow or &Shift;Up Arrow. Then use these keys to increase and decrease the scrolling speed. You can start or stop automatic scrolling temporarily by pressing the &Shift; key; pressing any other key deactivates this feature. Automatic scrolling works only in the view mode KHTML. If you want to stop a download for any reason then use the &Esc; key, the Toolbar Stop button or the Menubar View Stop item. When you are viewing a web page with the HTML Toolbar enabled you should see two new icons in the toolbar and . Use these to adjust the size of the text in the page if you find it difficult to read. How well this works will depend on how the web page has been constructed. Tabbed Browsing By using this feature you can make &konqueror; load multiple web pages in the same window, and switch between them using tabbed pages. This way, you can preload a page in the background while you carry on reading another. To use tabbed browsing, right click on a link and choose Open in New Tab from the drop down menu or &MMB; click. The page will be downloaded and displayed as normal, but with tabs across the top of the view, one tab for each page. &LMB; click on a tab to view that page, or you can use the shortcuts &Ctrl;, and &Ctrl;. to cycle through the tab pages. Alternatively, you can scroll through the tabs using the mouse wheel while the mouse pointer is over the tab bar (presuming that your mouse has one). Also, double-clicking over the empty tab bar space will open a new tab. Using the Open new tabs in the background option in the General page of the Settings dialog, clicking on a link downloads the page and shows a new tab for it, but the new page will not be displayed until you left click on the tab. If you check the Open links in new tab instead of in new window box in the General page of the SettingsConfigure Konqueror... dialog, &MMB; clicking on a link will open it in a new tab page and if you hold the &Shift; key down while clicking the &MMB; the link will be opened in a background tab page. Right clicking on a tab will bring up a menu with the following options: New Tab (&Ctrl;T) This opens a new, blank, tabbed page view. You can then download a web page into it by typing the &URL; into the Location Bar or by making a selection from the Bookmark Toolbar or the Sidebar history page. Duplicate Tab (&Ctrl;D) To create a duplicate tabbed page. Reload Tab (F5) Reloads the content of the current tab. Other Tabs Displays a submenu showing all other tabs. Choosing a tab from this list makes it the active tab. Other TabsReload All Tabs (&Shift;F5) Reloads the content of every tab. Other TabsClose Other Tabs To close all but the selected tab page. Detach Tab (&Ctrl;&Shift;B) This option removes the selected tabbed page from the current &konqueror; window and opens it in a new instance of &konqueror;. Close Tab (&Ctrl;W) To close the selected tab page. Web Shortcuts If enabled, &konqueror;'s Web Shortcuts feature lets you submit a query directly to a search engine or similar web site without having to visit the site first. For example, entering gg:konqueror into the Location Bar and pressing &Enter; will ask Google to search for items related to &konqueror;. To see what Web Shortcuts are available, and perhaps add your own, use SettingsConfigure Konqueror... and open the Web Shortcuts page. Once there, to make a new Web Shortcut select New... and you will now have a new dialog requesting the options and specifications of your new Web Shortcut. The first field is for the human readable name of the search provider; that is, simply the name of the Search provider. For example, Google. In the next field you should enter the &URI; that is used to do a search on the search engine. The whole text to be searched for can be specified as \{@} or \{0}. The recommended version is \{@} since it removes all query variables (name=value) from the resulting string whereas \{0} will be substituted with the unmodified query string. You can use \{1} ... \{n} to specify certain words from the query and \{name} to specify a value given by name=value in the user query. In addition it is possible to specify multiple references (names, numbers and strings) at once, like (\{name1,name2,...,"string"}). The first matching value (from the left) will be used as substitution value for the resulting &URI;. A quoted string can be used as the default value if nothing matches from the left of the reference list. To make a basic Web Shortcut here however, all that is required is the &URI; that is used to do a search on the search engine. Following our previous example with Google, we would enter http://www.google.com/search?q=\{@}&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8. You can often easily find where to place the \{@} by doing a search on the search engine in question, and then analyzing the &URL; address. For example, doing a Google search for &konqueror; produces the &URL;: http://www.google.com/search?q=konqueror&ie=UTF-8&oe=UTF-8. Now you need to merely replace &konqueror; with \{@} in this example to find the appropriate &URI; to be entered. In the third field you need to enter the &URI; shortcut. For example, the gg in gg:konqueror. In the next option — the drop-down menu — you have the option to select the character set that will be used to encode the search query. Once you have entered all the options correctly to your satisfaction, press &Enter; and your new Web Shortcut should now be available in &konqueror;. Access Keys &konqueror; has full support for the accesskey &HTML; attribute in forms and links. Access keys allow you to use the keyboard keys for functions which would perhaps normally be done with the mouse, such as following links. The benefit of this is, quite simply, that users can interact with a page with devices other than a pointing device. This feature has to be enabled by checking the Enable Access Key activation with &Ctrl; key option on the Web Browsing settings page. To activate the access keys in &konqueror;, press and release &Ctrl;. Once this is pressed, if a particular link on the website has the accesskey attribute in the given link, then the character(s) should appear over the link, identifying what needs to be pressed. Then, you can enter the character(s) associated with the link as an alternative to following the link with the mouse. To disable the access keys once activated you can press &Ctrl; again. The proper use of this feature requires that the web designer of the page has specifically assigned, using the accesskey attribute, an access key for the link. Many web designers might not include the accesskey in their links and forms, and consequently this feature will be unusable on the given webpage. Browser Identification When &konqueror; connects to a web site it sends some brief browser identification information, known as the User Agent string. Many web sites use this information to customize the pages that they send back, based on the strengths and weaknesses of different browsers. Unfortunately, some badly designed sites refuse to work properly unless you are using a browser that the site recognizes as a valid one, even though if given a chance, &konqueror; will work satisfactorily with the vast majority of web pages. To overcome this problem you can change the browser identification information that &konqueror; sends for specific sites or domains by selecting Web Browsing Browser Identification page of the settings dialog. Problems with getting a web page to work properly may also be due to its use of &Java; or JavaScript. If you suspect that this may be the case check that they have been enabled in the Java & JavaScript section of the settings dialog. Install the UserAgent Changer extension from the &konqueror; Plugins and enable it in Settings Configure Extensions. This extension adds a Change Browser Identification item to the Tools menu. Using this item lets you quickly switch between different User Agent strings. Saving and Printing Web Items When you are viewing a web page you can save it (or at least the basic &HTML; or similar source text) to your local disk with FileSave As.... If the page you are viewing uses frames, then you will also be given the FileSave Frame As... option. Left click in the frame you want to save first. If the page uses a background image, you can get and save that with the FileSave Background Image As... option. But if what you really want is that glorious picture of the latest Ferrari, then right clicking on the image will give you a drop-down menu with a Save Image As... option. Be sure to respect the owner's copyright, and ask for permission before using any pictures saved this way for anything other than your own viewing pleasure. If you right click on a link (which may be a picture) and select Save Link As... from the pop up menu the basic &HTML; or similar source text will be downloaded and saved on your local disk. Right clicking on a link (which may be a picture) and choosing Copy Link Address will copy the &URL; of the link to the clipboard so you can then paste it into, say, an e-mail to a friend telling her about this wonderful new site. Right clicking on a picture and choosing Copy Image copies the &URL; of the picture to the clipboard. To save a complete web page, including images, select Archive Web Page... from the Tools menu. Note that this feature is provided by a plugin and may not have been installed on your system. The web page will be saved as a single file with a .war extension and can be opened by left clicking on the filename in &konqueror; running in File Manager mode. Printing a copy of the page you are viewing is easily done with the Menubar File Print... or Print Frame option or with the Toolbar Print button. &FTP; &FTP;, or File Transfer Protocol, is one of the earliest, and still perhaps the best, way of transferring files between computers over the Internet. With &FTP; you can see files and folders on the distant computer just as if they were on your own system, download them onto your computer using &konqueror;'s normal Copy and Paste or Drag n' Drop methods and, if allowed, upload files from your machine to the other computer's filesystem. To try it, type the &URL; ftp://ftp.kde.org/pub/kde into the Location Toolbar and press &Enter;. As long as you are connected to the Internet, and as long as the &kde;'s &FTP; site is not too busy, you should end up seeing the /pub/kde folder at &kde-ftp; Although, strictly speaking, &FTP; &URL;s should be entered starting with ftp:// and WWW &URL;s starting with http:// &konqueror; is usually smart enough to figure out what is meant, and insert these characters for you if you leave them out. When you access an &FTP; site it will usually need some form of username and password from you. To simplify things, most &FTP; sites that offer files for free downloading will accept the word anonymous as a username and your email address as a password, and to make your life even easier &konqueror; will automatically supply these without troubling you. If you try to access an &FTP; site that does not need a proper username or password but which is too busy to accept any more connections, &konqueror; often interprets the busy message as a request for a name and password and will therefore pop up a dialog box asking you to supply them. Sites that are more concerned with security will need a proper username and password, in which case &konqueror; will ask you for them or you can include the username in the &URL; you type into the Location Toolbar, as for example ftp://username@ftp.cia.org &konqueror; will then prompt you for the password. &konqueror; can also support automatic logins as specified in a .netrc file. Details of how to enable this feature are given at http://www.konqueror.org/faq.html#netrc &URL;s with Port Numbers If you specify a port number in your &URL;, as in for example http://intranet.corp.com:1080, you might get the error message Access to restricted port in POST denied. This is done for security reasons. If you nevertheless need to access a server on this port, just add a key line OverridenPorts=CommaSeparatedListOfAllowedPorts to $KDEDIR/share/config/kio_httprc or ~/.kde/share/config/kio_httprc. For example OverridenPorts=23,15 (it should not include any embedded spaces). &konqueror; will reject the following ports (the list is hardcoded in kdelibs/kio/kio/job.cpp): 1, 7, 9, 11, 13, 15, 17, 19, 20, 21, 22, 23, 25, 37, 42, 43, 53, 77, 79, 87, 95, 101, 102, 103, 104, 109, 110, 111, 113, 115, 117, 119, 123, 135, 139, 143, 179, 389, 512, 513, 514, 515, 526, 530, 531, 532, 540, 556, 587, 601, 989, 990, 992, 993, 995, 1080, 2049, 4045, 6000, 6667 &Pamela.Roberts; Automatic Text Completion You can get &konqueror; to help you enter a path or &URL; into the Location Toolbar by enabling one of the Text Completion features. To do this right click on a clear part of the Location Toolbar text entry box and select Text Completion from the pop up menu. This will let you choose between the following options: None What you get is what you type. Manual When you have typed part of a path or &URL;, pressing &Ctrl;E or will complete the entry if it is possible to do so unambiguously. Automatic As you type into the Location Toolbar window &konqueror; will automatically extend what you type to complete one possible path or &URL;, highlighting the characters it has added. Continue typing if that's not what you wanted or press &Enter; to accept it. Dropdown List A drop-down window will appear as you type, showing the possible matches to what you have typed so far. When the path or &URL; that you want appears in the window click on it with the &LMB;. You can also use the Down Arrow or and Up Arrow or &Shift; keys to select it then press &Enter;. Short Automatic This is like Automatic mode except that it only extends what you have typed as far as the next / symbol in the path or &URL;. Press &Ctrl;E or to accept the suggestion, &Enter; when the complete path or &URL; is shown. Dropdown List & Automatic This is a combination of both options described above. Default This item appears at the bottom of the submenu and enables you to switch to the default behaviour Dropdown List. You should try out these different modes and pick the one that suits you best. The history of recently visited &URL;s that &konqueror; uses for the Text Completion function can be viewed and edited in the History page of the Sidebar. &Pamela.Roberts; Using Bookmarks Although you can use &konqueror;'s bookmarks to record the locations of your own files and folders, they are most useful when you are surfing the Web, letting you build up a list of useful sites. To open the Bookmarks menu left click on the Bookmarks menu. Once the list is visible, you can navigate through it with the arrow keys or with your mouse, then press &Enter; or left click to visit the selected location. To add a new item to the list use Bookmarks Add Bookmark or &Ctrl;B or right click on a clear space in the web page or folder view and select Bookmark this Page / Bookmark this Location from the pop up menu. The Bookmarks list can contain subfolders containing other bookmarks, you can create these with Bookmarks New Bookmark Folder... To add a bookmark into a subfolder rather than into the main Bookmark list, select the folder from within the Bookmarks list and use the Add Bookmark item in that folder. You can also access your bookmarks from the Sidebar or from the Bookmark Toolbar. If you enter bookmarks:/ in the location bar the bookmarks home page with an overview of all bookmarks and folders is shown. The Bookmark Editor The BookmarksEdit Bookmarks option opens the Bookmark Editor. This shows a tree view of your bookmarks and bookmark subfolders. As is usual for tree views in &kde;, subfolders are shown with a small > arrow at the left of the folder name; left clicking on it will expand the view to show the contents of that subfolder and the > arrow will change to v; left clicking on the v arrow will collapse the subfolder view. To select an item in the list you can left click on it, or you can navigate through the list by using the Up arrow and Down arrow keys to move around, Right arrow to expand a subfolder and Left arrow to collapse it. You can move an item to a different place in the list by using the normal Drag and Drop or Cut and Paste methods. The order in which the items appear in the Bookmark Editor is the order they will appear in the Bookmarks drop down list. The Folder Insert Separator option can be used to insert separating lines into the list wherever you wish. A new subfolder can be created at the selected point in the list by using the New Folder... option in the Folder menu or from the drop down menu you get when you right click on an item in the main part of the window, or with &Ctrl;N To change the name of a bookmark or folder select it then press F2 or choose the Rename item from the Edit menu or the pop up menu that appears when you right click on the item. Similarly, you can edit the &URL; by pressing F3 or choosing the Change Location menu item. The Bookmark Editor lets you import bookmarks from a range of other browsers into &konqueror;'s bookmark list, putting them into a new folder or replacing all current bookmarks. To do this select Import from the File menu. The FileExport option can be used to export &konqueror;'s bookmarks to a &Netscape; or Mozilla browser. To select which bookmark subfolder is used to hold the Bookmark Toolbar items select the subfolder then choose Set as Toolbar Folder from the Folder menu. If you are tidying up your bookmarks and have forgotten what a particular web page is, you can easily open it from within the Bookmark Editor by right clicking on the item and selecting Open in Konqueror from the pop up menu. If you just want to check that the &URL; is still valid select Check Status instead. All your changes are automatically saved if you close the Bookmark Editor. &Pamela.Roberts; The Sidebar The Sidebar appears as a separate view at the left of &konqueror;'s window. It can be invoked with Settings Show Sidebar or toggled on and off with the F9 key. With the Sidebar It contains a number of tabbed pages; left click on a tab's icon to view that page. Left clicking on the icon for the visible page will collapse the Sidebar so that only the tab icons are visible. Bookmarks This page shows a tree view of your Bookmarks. Left click on an item to open it in the main view. History This page shows a tree view of your browsing History. Left clicking on an item will open it in the main view, or you can open it in a new &konqueror; window by right clicking and selecting Open in New Window from the pop up menu. You can remove an item from the history by right clicking on it and selecting Remove Entry. Selecting Clear History will clear out the entire history. The pop up menu you get when you right click on any entry in the History page also gives you the option of choosing whether the entire history is sorted by name or by date. Selecting Preferences... from this pop up menu brings up the History Sidebar control module. This can be used to set the maximum size of your history and set a time after which items are automatically removed. You can also set different fonts for new and old &URL;s. The Detailed tooltips checkbox controls how much information is displayed when you hover the mouse pointer over an item in the history page. Home Folder This page shows a tree view of the subfolders of your home folder. Note that hidden folders (those with names beginning with a dot) are not shown. Left click on an item to open it in the main view, or right click to display a pop up menu allowing you to open the subfolder in a new window or as a new tab page of the main view. Network This page is intended to show a tree view of your important network connections, although local folders can also be included. Again, you can left click on an item to open it in the main view or right click to bring up a menu with a wider range of possibilities. The folders shown in the Network page are held in the folder ~/.kde/share/apps/konqsidebartng/virtual_folders/remote/, and you can make new ones just as you would make any other subfolder. The items within these folders are held as .desktop files and can be created with &konqueror;'s Create New Link to Location (URL)... option in the Edit menu. Root Folder The Root Folder tree has the path /, and is the base folder of your system's local files. If you expand the Root folder you will find another folder called root. This belongs to the system administrator or Super User and is her home folder. You will also find a folder called home, in which you should be able to find your own Home folder again. Services This page provides quick access to the following services: Applications, Audio CD Browser, Fonts and Video DVD Browser. Places The Places panel is located at the left of the window by default. The Places panel shows any locations you have bookmarked. It also shows any disk or media attached to the computer. The easiest way to add a folder to the Places panel is to drag it and drop it in the panel. Moreover, you can click inside the panel with the &RMB; and choose Add Entry... from the context menu. The Sidebar configuration can be changed by right clicking on the empty area below the bottom tab icon or by left clicking on the Configuration Button icon, which is enabled in the context menu. Doing this brings up a menu with the following options: Add New This option lets you add a new tab page to the Sidebar. The new page can contain different Sidebar modules or a new Folder tree view. The last option in this submenu allows you to rollback to system default. Multiple Views Selecting this option splits the Sidebar so that two tab pages can be seen at once. Show Tabs Left, Show Tabs Right This option lets you choose whether the tab icons are shown at the left or right of the Sidebar. Show Configuration Button Use this option to show or hide the Configuration Button icon. Right clicking on a tab icon brings up a menu with the following options: Set Name This option lets you change the Name of that page. Set URL This option lets you change the &URL; (path) of the folder viewed in that page. Set Icon To change the tab icon. Remove To remove the tab page from the Sidebar. Configure Sidebar The last item shows the Sidebar configuration submenu as described above. &Pamela.Roberts; Saving Settings & Profiles General Settings When you close down &konqueror; your current View menu settings (such as the View Mode, Use index.html and Show Hidden Files items) are not automatically saved as the default options; however, you can have &konqueror; remember these settings by selecting SettingsSave View Profile As... and the current setting will become the default option to be used the next time &konqueror; is started. But you can also specify different View menu settings for an individual folder. To do this select View Adjust View Properties..., change the View settings in the dialog to whatever you want. Then apply the view properties to the Current folder. Doing this creates a .directory file in that folder to hold the folder View settings. Use this dialog again to remove the folder specific settings (or just delete the .directory file). One nice use of this feature is if you have a folder full of pictures, you can set that particular folder to display thumbnails of the pictures (by choosing the View Mode Icons and Preview from the View menu) when you open it, while not displaying images as thumbnails in other folders. View Profiles &konqueror; can save a whole set of options as a View Profile. Some view profiles are part of the standard &konqueror; installation, such as Web Browsing, File Management, KDE Development, Midnight Commander and Tabbed Browsing; but you can add your own, too. To modify a view profile (say, the Web Browsing profile), load the profile with SettingsLoad View ProfileWeb Browsing , and change the &konqueror; settings to whatever you want. Now select SettingsSave View Profile As... . In the dialog which appears, you can change the name of the profile, which will create a new profile with that name, or you can leave the name as it is to modify the current profile. If you select Save URLs in profile, the current &URL; will be loaded when you load that view profile. This functions in a similar way to the Home Page in many web browsers. If you want &konqueror; to start up with an empty window enter about:blank into the location bar before saving the profile. You can create a desktop icon to start &konqueror; with your new profile. First create a desktop icon by clicking with the &RMB; onto the &konqueror; entry in the application launcher menu. Then select Add to Desktop in the context menu. Open the settings dialog of the new icon on your desktop by clicking on the Tools icon. Change Command in the Application tab page to kfmclient , MyNewProfile being what you called the new profile. Then change the name to something like MyNewProfile . &Pamela.Roberts; Plugins &Netscape; Plugins Currently, &konqueror; supports &Netscape; plugins. Selecting Settings Configure Konqueror... opens the configuration dialog. Select the Plugins page, where you find two tabs: Global Settings to enable plugins and configure how they are used in &konqueror; and Plugins which shows you the &Netscape; plugins that &kde; has found and allows you to scan for plugins. For more information see the Browser Plugins help page. &konqueror; Plugins &kde; releases several useful plugins that interact with &konqueror; in various ways. These are explained briefly below. Use SettingsConfigure Extensions... to open a dialog with all installed plugins and select the ones you need. All plugins are accessible in the Tools menu. Only plugins appropriate for the current mode (file manager or browser in KHTML/WebKit view) are listed in the dialog. Browser Mode Web Page Translation This uses the machine translation service provided by Google Translate to translate the current HTML page to whatever language you want (within reason). It can be launched with ToolsTranslate Web Page. If you have a portion of the text on the page selected, that will be translated instead of the entire &URL;. Machine translation is not a perfect science! Google will at best give you a rough translation, and at worst will give you a very funny read. Don't base important decisions on things you have read from a Google translated page, without confirming that the translation is indeed accurate. You may only translate web pages that are accessible on the world wide web. To translate any other text, you should go directly to the Google site itself, where you are able to paste in text for translation. DOM Tree Viewer (KHTML view only) The DOM Tree Viewer allows a developer to view the styles, attributes and elements of a web document. Selecting ToolsShow DOM Tree opens a new window which displays the document object model (DOM) of the current HTML page. By default the display starts at the root node of the document, example: documentElement, all other nodes that you will see are children or descendants of the root node. If you wish to manipulate the DOM tree in any way you will have to use an external script to do so. Web Page Validator This plugin uses the W3C HTML validator to validate the current page, very useful when creating web pages. Validate &HTML; (by URI) / Validate &HTML; (by Upload) The validate &HTML; option allows you to compare your &HTML; document to the defined syntax of &HTML; and reports any errors found. Validating your &HTML; will ensure that your pages display properly on all browsers. Validate CSS (by URI) Allows you to validate your &CSS; style sheet that is embedded in an &HTML; or &XHTML; document. Having valid &CSS; is critical to ensuring that your web site maintains a consistent look regardless of the browser that is being used. Validate Links Allows you to confirm that the links on your site contain no redirects or broken links. This tool recursively checks all links on a site. Validate Page Validates the current page but does not show the result in another window or tab as the previous actions. Using this item enables the action View Validator Report to display a summary of the validation. Configure Validator The configure validator item allows you to view the preset validators you can use to validate your &HTML; and &CSS;. HTML Settings Select ToolsHTML Settings to enable or disable a number of HTML settings without going through the Settings dialog. JavaScript Allows you to turn the use of JavaScript in &konqueror; on or off. Java Allows you to turn the use of &Java; in &konqueror; on or off. Cookies Allows you to turn the use of Cookies in &konqueror; on or off. Plugins Allows you to turn the use of the &konqueror; plugins you have installed on or off. Autoload Images Allows you to turn on or off the loading of images in web pages. Enable Proxy Allows you to enable or disable the use of a proxy in the &konqueror; browser. Enable Cache Allows you to enable or disable the use of a cache in the &konqueror; browser. Cache Policy The Cache Policy submenu provides you with a way to configure how &konqueror; uses a cache. The possible uses include: Keep Cache in Sync Use Cache if Possible Offline Browsing Mode User Agent Changer Select ToolsChange Browser Identification to get a menu that allows you to change the User Agent string without going through the Settings dialog procedure. The plugin allows you to change the Browser and Operating System identification on a domain-by-domain basis. This is useful when browsing websites that limit access to those using a particular web browser. Default Identification The default User Agent header for &konqueror; is Mozilla/5.0(compatible;Konqueror/4.7)(KHTML/4.7, like Gecko). If you come across a site that refuses this browser access, change your User Agent to one of the options below. Browser submenu The following menu items show a list of popular browsers such as Firefox, Internet Explorer, Netscape Navigator, Opera, Other, and Safari. Apply To Entire Site This option allows you to specify that the defined User Agent applies across every page on the site you are visiting. Configure Selecting Configure opens the settings dialog and allows you to fine tune the amount of information you wish to reveal about the browser and operating system being used. Archive Web Page (KHTML view only) Invoked with Tools Archive Web Page, this tool creates an archive (.war ) file containing the web page being viewed including the images. Left click on the archive file name to view the saved page. File Manager Mode Directory Filter This is controlled by &Ctrl;&Shift;I ToolsShow Filter Bar and allows you to choose which types of item are displayed in a folder. Image Gallery In File Manager mode, you can select ToolsCreate Image Gallery or use &Ctrl;I to create an HTML page with thumbnails of all the images in the current folder. By default the HTML page is called images.html and the thumbnails are put into a new images folder. When you start the Image Gallery plugin a dialog opens allowing you to adjust the way the gallery is created. Page Look The Look dialog is for adjusting the appearance of the gallery page. Look Dialog Screenshot Screenshot Page title The Page title option has a text input box for changing the title of the image gallery page. Images per row The Images per row option has a slider and a spin box for adjusting the number of thumbnails that are in a single row in the gallery. Show image file name The Show image file name check box allows you to choose whether to display filenames below the gallery thumbnails. Show image file size The Show image filesize check box allows you to choose whether to display filesizes below the gallery thumbnails. Show image dimensions The Show image dimensions check box allows you to choose whether to display image dimensions in pixels below the gallery thumbnails. Font name The Font name combo box provides you with a choice of which font to use in creating the gallery. Font size The Font size spin box is for changing the size of the font you selected. Foreground color The Foreground color option has a selector for choosing the foreground color of the gallery, this includes the text areas. Background color The Background color option has a selector for choosing the background color of the gallery. Folders The Folders dialog is used for choosing where to save the gallery. This dialog is also used to configure which folders are used. Folders Dialog Screenshot Screenshot Save to HTML file The Save to file selector allows you to decide where you want to save your image gallery html page. Recurse subfolders The Recurse subfolders check box enables recursing of subdirectories. If the check box is enabled, a slider and spin box are enabled to select the recursion depth. Copy original files The Copy original files check box creates an image folder storing copies of the original images used in the gallery. Use comment file The use comment file check box enables a file selector to choose a comments file to use with your gallery. The comment file contains the subtitles for the images. The format of this file is: # this is a comment, lines starting with '#' are ignored FILENAME1: Description FILENAME2: Description Thumbnails The thumbnails dialog is used for adjusting the properties of the thumbnails in the gallery. Thumbnails Dialog Screenshot Screenshot Image format for the thumbnails The image format combo box allows you to choose which format is used for the thumbnail images. Thumbnail size The thumbnail size option provides a slider and spin box for adjusting the size of the thumbnails used in the gallery. Set different color depth The set different color depth check box enables a combo box for changing the color depth of the thumbnails if you wish to use a different color depth to that used in the original image. Search Bar Provides a text box for easy access to search engines such as Google. Clicking on the icon on the left side of the search box opens a menu to select and enable different search engines and configure their Web Shortcuts. Shell Command Plugin This plugin enables you to execute a shell command in the current folder and view the output in a separate window. View Mode Extensions &konqueror; provides additional views in View View Mode in file manager and browser mode, if the corresponding applications and plugins are installed. The file manager mode has the additional views Radial Map from the application Filelight and the &konqueror; plugin File Size View. Josef Weidendorfer
Josef.Weidendorfer@gmx.de
&fsview; - the File System View Introduction The &fsview; Plugin for &konqueror; is another view mode for objects of mimetype inode/directory for local files. It can be viewed as an alternative to the various iconviews and listviews for browsing the content of your local file system. The unique property of &fsview; is its ability to show whole nested folder hierarchies using a so-called tree map for graphical visualization. Tree maps allow for displaying metrics of objects in nested structures: each object is represented by a rectangle whose area is proportional to its metric. The sum of the children's metrics must be equal to or smaller than the parent object's metric. For &fsview;, sizes of files and folders are chosen as the metric, where the size of a folder is defined to be the sum of the sizes of its subitems. This way, big files even deep down in the folder hierarchy can be spotted easily be looking for large rectangles. So &fsview; can be looked at as a graphical and interactive version of the &UNIX; du command. The integration of &fsview; as part of Konqueror allows it to use the standard features such as context file menus, and mime type sensitive actions. But it was chosen not to implement automatic update by watching file system changes: if you delete a file shown in &fsview; outside of &konqueror;, you have to update manually by ⪚ pressing F5 to see the change. The reason for this decision is the potentially huge number of files which would have to be watched for changes, and thus, could put an unreasonable pressure on system resources for a small feature. Visualization Features This section explains the graphical visualization of &fsview; in detail. Item Drawing Options In &fsview;, an item of the tree map visualization is a rectangle representing a file or folder of your file system. For easier navigation, rectangles have meaningful coloring and labeling options. The color of a rectangle, switchable via menu item ViewColor Mode can be either representative of Depth, for easy detection of nesting, or a color mapping of different file attributes such as name, owner, group, or mime type. A rectangle can be labeled with the various attributes of the corresponding file or folder. For each attribute, you can choose whether it should be shown at all, only if space is available, or if space should be taken from children (thus introducing errors to pure tree map drawing constraints). Additionally, you can choose the relative location of the label in the rectangle. TreeMap Drawing Algorithms For drawing algorithms in tree maps, the rule that the area is proportional to the metric of an item should hold true. With the tree map in &fsview;, this goal isn't always met: we draw borders to show the nesting of items, and this border takes space for an item which is possibly lost for the areas of child items. Note that less space is lost for the border if the rectangle is quadratic. Similarly, it is better for a good overview to let each rectangle at least have its name as a label. It is an option to always force space for labels, or only to draw labels when empty space is available. In the latter case, the tool tips appearing when the mouse is held over an item can help a lot. They show information for the item the mouse is currently over, together with its parent folders up to the root item of the tree map. How the space of an item is split into subareas for children is left to the implementation. It is always better to try to split areas in such a way that rectangles are as quadratic as possible, both for labeling and less space lost by borders. The best methods in this regard are Rows, Columns, or Recursive Bisection. You can choose the minimal area of items to be drawn via the menu item ViewStop at Area. Instead, a hash pattern will be drawn over the parents area to signal that this space is in fact occupied by a child or children. User Interface &fsview; supports multiple selection of items, similar to the iconview and listview. This allows for actions to be done simultaneously to a set of files. A simple mouse click always selects a single item below the mouse pointer. Use a mouse click in combination with pressing the &Shift; key for range selection or the &Ctrl; key for selection toggle. Note that by selecting an item, subitems can no longer be selected. Selecting an item will also clear the selection of all its parent items before. Keyboard navigation is available in tree maps: use Left Arrow and Right Arrow keys to move the current item between siblings, and the Up Arrow and Down Arrow keys to go up and down the nesting hierarchy. Space selects the item; in conjunction with &Shift; does range selection; and with the &Ctrl; key held down simultaneously, toggles selection of the current item. Press Return to run the open action on the current item. Credits and License Originally, &fsview; was meant as a small test application and usage tutorial for the TreeMap widget developed within KCachegrind. Copyright by Josef Weidendorfer, licensed using GPL V2.
&Pamela.Roberts; Configuring &konqueror; In common with the rest of &kde;, &konqueror; is highly configurable, so you can really get the look and feel that best fits your needs and wishes. Toolbars When &kde; is newly installed, &konqueror;'s window contains a Menubar, Main and Location Toolbars and possibly a Bookmark Toolbar. Maybe you don't need all these toolbars. To hide one of them, go into the SettingsToolbars Shown menu and uncheck its box. To show a hidden toolbar, just check the box. The Menubar itself can be toggled on and off with the shortcut key combination &Ctrl;M. If you right click on a Toolbar, you will get a menu to configure this bar. You can lock or unlock the toolbar position and choose the text position, icon size and the orientation of unlocked bars. If the toolbars are unlocked, on the left hand end of each bar you can see some handles. By &LMB; clicking on them, you can drag a bar into a new position and even detach it from the window and place it anywhere on your screen. The icons shown in the various bars can be changed by using the Settings Configure Toolbars... option, which brings up the Configure Toolbars dialog box. The number and type of these toolbars will depend on whether &konqueror; is in Web Browser or File Manager mode and whether you have &konqueror; plugins installed. Shortcuts To change the shortcut key arrangements used by &konqueror; select SettingsConfigure Shortcuts... . This will launch a dialog box as shown below. Shortcut config screenshot 1 Use the search box to find the action you want to add or change the shortcut keys for and select it by left clicking on the name. After you have selected an action in the list you will notice that this item is highlighted and you see two additional check boxes below this item in the list view. There you can configure a combination of keys or maybe no key binding at all for the selected action. Shortcut config screenshot 2 Default: the selected action will be associated with &kde;'s default value. This is a good choice for most actions, as &kde; comes with reasonable key bindings we have thought about. Custom: if this option is enabled, you can create a key combination for the selected action. Click on the button labeled either None or labeled with the previously selected custom shortcut. Now the button label changes to Input. Then press any modifier key (&ie; &Shift;, &Ctrl;, or &Alt;) and then normal key or a function key (⪚ F11) you want to assign to this key combination. You can reset the shortcut to None by using this button: . Clicking on the Alternate column of a row in the list allows to edit the second shortcut for the action. Other Settings Selecting Settings Configure Konqueror... brings up a dialog box which you can use to control most aspects of &konqueror;'s behavior. It contains these sections which are selected by left clicking on one of the icons at the left of the dialog box: General: Configure general &konqueror; behavior Performance: Configure settings that can improve &konqueror;'s performance Bookmarks: Configure the bookmarks home page File Management: You can configure how Konqueror behaves as a file manager here View Modes: Configure file manager view modes Navigation: Configure file manager navigation Services: Configure file manager services General: Configure general file manager settings File Associations: Configure file associations Trash: Configure trash settings Web Browsing: Configure the browser behavior Proxy: Configure the proxy servers used Appearance: Configure how to display web pages AdBlocK Filters: Configure &konqueror; AdBlocK filters Web Shortcuts: Configure enhanced browsing Cache: Configure web cache settings History: Configure the history sidebar Cookies: Configure the way cookies work Browser Identification: Configure the way Konqueror reports itself Java & JavaScript: Configure the behavior of Java and JavaScript Plugins: Configure the browser plugins Pressing the Help button will give you detailed instructions about how to use each of these sections, or you can use the What's This? feature. &Pamela.Roberts; Command Reference The shortcut key combinations shown in this chapter are the default ones. They can of course be changed. Special Shortcuts There are some useful shortcuts that are not shown in any of the menus: F6 Sets the focus to the text entry box in the Location Toolbar. &Ctrl;. Activate the next tab page. &Ctrl;, Activate the previous tab page. The Menubar Note that some menu entries only appear when they are applicable to the file you currently have open in &konqueror;. For example, the EditFind... item will not appear when you are viewing the contents of a directory. &konqueror; has different menu items in file manager and browser mode. Only the items for these two modes are described in this chapter. If &konqueror; is using embedded components (&kde; Parts) such as Gwenview for image viewing, &okular; for PDF and &PostScript; documents &etc; the menu items from these applications are merged into &konqueror;'s menu. Help for these additional menu items you find in the handbook of the embedded application. The File Menu &Ctrl;N File New Window Open another &konqueror; window. &Ctrl;T File New Tab Open another &konqueror; tab, containing a blank page. &Alt;O File Open Location... Sets the focus to the text entry box in the Location Toolbar. &Ctrl;O File Open File... Open a file using the &kde; file dialog. File Sessions Open a submenu to save the current session (open tabs and windows) for easy retrieval, manage sessions and switch to previously saved sessions. File Send Link Address... Send an email containing a link to the current location. File Send File... Send an email containing the selected file as an attachment. File Save Background Image As... (Browser mode) Only applies if you are viewing a web page with a background image. Opens the Save As dialog box to let you save the background image file to your own computer. File Save As... (Browser mode) Only applies if you are viewing a document or web page, uses the Save As... dialog box to let you save a copy to your own computer. File Save Frame As... (Browser mode) Similar to Save As... but for use with a web site that uses frames. &Ctrl;P File Print... Print. File Print Frame (Browser mode) Print selected frame of a Web page. &Ctrl;Q File Quit Close down this instance of &konqueror;. The Edit Menu &Ctrl;Z Edit Undo: Action Sometimes lets you reverse a mistaken action. &Ctrl;X Edit Cut Puts selected item(s) into the clipboard. If you then paste the items they will be moved from the original location to the new one. &Ctrl;C Edit Copy Copy selected item(s) to the clipboard. &Ctrl;V Edit Paste (Browser mode) Paste the clipboard content into the Location Bar. &Ctrl;V Edit Paste Clipboard Contents... (File Manager mode) Paste the currently copied/cut item(s) to the current folder. If the clipboard does not contain files or folders, the clipboard contents (such as text or image data) will be pasted into a new file. &Ctrl;A Edit Select All (Browser mode) Selects all text in an &HTML; page or in a text page being previewed, you can then Copy it and Paste it into a text editor. Edit Create New (File Manager mode) Creates a new object (such as a folder or a text file) in the current folder. See the Create New... section for more details. F2 Edit Rename (File Manager mode) Lets you rename a file or folder without having to open the Properties... dialog box. Del Edit Move to Trash (File Manager mode) Move selected item(s) to the Trash folder. &Shift;Del Edit Delete (File Manager mode) Delete the selected item(s). Edit Edit File Type... (File Manager mode) Open the Edit File Type dialog box &Alt;Return Edit Properties... (File Manager mode) Shows the properties dialog for the currently selected item(s). &Ctrl;S Edit Selection Select Items Matching... (File Manager mode) Together with the Unselect Items Matching..., Unselect All and Invert Selection commands, this provides an easy and powerful way of selecting multiple files. It brings up a simple dialog box where you can enter a file name using the wild card characters * and ?, for example entering *.html will select all files ending with .html while ?a* will select all files which have the letter a as the second character in their filename. Edit Selection Unselect Items Matching... (File Manager mode) Unselect files or folders via a dialog similar to the one used by Select.... &Ctrl;A Edit Selection Select All (File Manager mode) Selects all items in a folder; you can then Copy or Cut them and Paste them into a different folder. Edit Selection Unselect All (File Manager mode) Unselect all selected files or folders. &Ctrl;&Shift;A Edit Selection Invert Selection (File Manager mode) Invert current selection. &Ctrl;F Edit Find... (Browser mode) Displays the search bar at the bottom of the current window. Start typing to find a text string in a text page you are previewing or in an &HTML; page. F3 Edit Find Next (Browser mode) Find the next occurrence of the text string in the text or &HTML; page. &Shift;F3 Edit Find Previous (Browser mode) Find the previous occurrence of the text string in the text or &HTML; page. The View Menu View View Mode In browser mode this submenu holds items to select embedded views like KHTML, Embedded Advanced Text Editor and more embedded views. In file manager mode this submenu holds items to select Icon, Details, Compact, Terminal Emulator and more view modes. View Use index.html (File Manager mode) If a selected folder contains a file index.html, it will be opened as a web page rather than showing the folder as a list of files. View Lock to Current Location A locked view cannot change folders. Use in combination with Link View to explore many files from one folder. View Link View Link current view to others in a multiple view window. A linked view follows folder changes made in other linked views. This is especially useful with different types of views, such as a folder tree with an icon view or detailed view, and possibly a terminal emulator window. F5 View Reload Reload. &Esc; View Stop Stop load (particularly useful when web browsing). &Ctrl;+ View Enlarge Font / &Ctrl;- View Shrink Font (Browser mode) Use these to adjust the size of the text in the page if you find it difficult to read. How well this works will depend on how the web page has been constructed. &Ctrl;U View View Document Source (Browser mode - KHTML view) View document source text. Only available if you are viewing a document or &HTML; page. View View Frame Source (Browser mode) View frame source text Only applies if you are viewing a web site that uses frames. Similar to View Document Source. &Ctrl;I View View Document Information (Browser mode - KHTML view) View document information, such as title, &URL;, and &HTTP; headers used in retrieving the document. Only available if you are viewing an &HTML; page. View Set Encoding (Browser mode) Allows you to choose the character encoding used to display &HTML; pages. Default is usually the best choice. View Sort By (File Manager mode) Changes whether items are sorted by Name or other criteria described in Information in the View. Descending reverses the sort order. Folders First sorts folders before files. View Additional Information (File Manager mode) Displays additional information described in Information in the View. View Preview (File Manager mode) Displays a symbolic preview of the file contents in the different view modes. View Show in Groups (File Manager mode) Displays the content of the current folder grouped by the option selected in Sort By (only available in the Icons view mode). &Alt;. View Show Hidden Files (File Manager mode) Shows all the hidden files and sub-folders within the current folder. View Adjust View Properties... (File Manager mode) Opens the View Properties Dialog. The Go Menu &Alt;Up Go Up Go up a level in the folder hierarchy. &Alt;Left Go Back Go back to the previous view. &Alt;Right Go Forward You can only go forward if you've previously gone back. &Alt;Home Go Home Page (Browser mode) Go to your home page as defined on the General page of the settings dialog. &Alt;Home Go Home Folder (File Manager mode) Changes to the users home folder, ⪚, /home/Peter/. Go Applications (File Manager mode) Open the folder holding your applications. Go Network Folder (File Manager mode) Network folders show up in a special location of &konqueror; and &dolphin; called a virtual folder. You can find more information on how to use this folder in the KNetAttach Handbook. Go Settings (File Manager mode) Open a virtual folder with all &systemsettings; modules in Icons, Details or Columns view. Select an item to display the settings module in a separate dialog window. Go Trash (File Manager mode) Open your Trash folder. Go Autostart (File Manager mode) Open your Autostart folder. &Ctrl;&Shift;H Go Show History shows a tree view of your browsing history in a separate window. See Sidebar. Go Most Often Visited Displays a submenu showing the &URL;s you visit most often. Selecting one of these will make &konqueror; open that &URL;. Go Recently Visited Displays a submenu showing the &URL;s you recently visited. Selecting one of these will make &konqueror; open that &URL;. Go Closed Items Displays a submenu showing the closed &URL;s you visit. Selecting one of these will make &konqueror; open that &URL;. Use Empty Closed Items History to clear the submenu. The Bookmarks Menu See the section Using Bookmarks in this manual for a fuller description of these menu items. &Ctrl;B Bookmarks Add Bookmark Add current selection to your bookmarks. Bookmarks Bookmark Tabs as Folder... Create a bookmark folder containing links to all of the &URL;s currently open in &konqueror; tabs. Bookmarks New Bookmark Folder... Create a new folder in your Bookmarks folder. Bookmarks Edit Bookmarks... Open the Bookmark Editor. The Tools Menu F4 Tools Open Terminal (File Manager mode) Open a &konsole; terminal window. &Ctrl;F Tools Find File... (File Manager mode) Open the &kfind; application. Tools Select Remote Charset (File Manager mode) Offers to choose the charset used by a remote connection manually. If you have &konqueror; plugins installed there will be additional entries in the Tools menu. See the &konqueror; Plugins chapter for further details. The Settings Menu See also the section Saving Settings and Profiles. Settings Toolbars Shown Opens a submenu where you can choose to show or hide the various Toolbars. &Ctrl;M Settings Show Menubar Show/Hide the menubar. Settings Show Terminal Emulator Open a small text terminal view at the bottom of the main window. F9 Settings Show Sidebar Toggles the display of the &konqueror; sidebar. See . &Ctrl;&Shift; F Settings Full Screen Mode Changes &konqueror; to full screen mode, in which the &konqueror; window takes up the whole screen, and does not have the usual window decorations. To exit full screen mode, click on the Exit Full Screen Mode icon on the toolbar, or press &Ctrl;&Shift; F. Settings Load View Profile Load the settings associated with a particular view profile. Settings Save View Profile As... Save the current settings to the current view profile. Settings Configure View Profiles... Lets you change an existing view profile or create a new one. Settings Configure Extensions... Opens a dialog with all installed plugins (⪚ from the KDE module extragear) and allows you to select the ones you need. All plugins are accessible in the Tools menu. Settings Configure Spell Checking... Displays the spell checking configuration dialog box, in which you can change settings associated with spell checking in &konqueror;. Settings Configure Shortcuts... Lets you see and change &konqueror;'s shortcut key bindings, &ie; the associations between actions such as Copy and keys or combinations of keys such as &Ctrl;V. If you do this take care not to duplicate an existing shortcut. Settings Configure Toolbars... Lets you configure the Main, Extra and Location Toolbars. See the section Changing Bars. Settings Configure &konqueror;... Lets you configure &konqueror;'s behavior in file manager and browser mode. The Window Menu &Ctrl;&Shift;L Window Split View Left/Right Split View Left/Right. &Ctrl;&Shift;T Window Split View Top/Bottom Split View Top/Bottom. &Ctrl;&Shift;W Window Close Active View Remove Active View. &Ctrl;N Window New Window Open another &konqueror; window. &Ctrl;&Shift;D Window Duplicate Window Open another &konqueror; window, duplicating the current one. &Ctrl;T Window New Tab Open a new, empty, tab page. &Ctrl;D Window Duplicate Current Tab Open a duplicate tab page. &Ctrl;&Shift;B Window Detach Current Tab Show the current tab page in a new instance of &konqueror;. &Ctrl;W Window Close Current Tab Close the current tab page. &Ctrl;&Shift;Left Window Move Tab Left Move the current tab one place left in the list of tabs. &Ctrl;&Shift;Right Window Move Tab Right Move the current tab one place right in the list of tabs. The Help Menu Apart from standard &kde; Help menu items described in the section Help Menu of the &kde; Fundamentals you will have the menu entry &konqueror; Introduction to revisit the introductory pages that you got when &konqueror; was first started. &Pamela.Roberts; Questions and Answers Can I run &konqueror; from another window manager? Just install &Qt;, kdelibs and kdebase, and from your favorite window manager, launch &konqueror;. It should work just fine, but if it doesn't (&kde; developers don't test that case often), report it to http://bugs.kde.org and try running kdeinit before running &konqueror;; it usually helps. Where does &konqueror; keep all its configuration data? Generally in the ~/.kde folder (this may be ~/.kde4 on your system, depending on how &kde; was installed). Don't alter these files unless you really know what you are doing. The ~/.kde/share/apps/konqueror/profiles folder holds individual files containing settings for each of your profiles. Your bookmarks are held in ~/.kde/share/apps/konqueror/bookmarks.xml Cookies are held in ~/.kde/share/apps/kcookiejar/cookies Your history, as used for the auto-completion feature, is in ~/.kde/share/config/konq_history In the folder ~/.kde/share/config/ the files konqiconviewrc, konqlistviewrc and konquerorrc hold a whole lot of general configuration settings. The folder ~/.kde/cache-hostname/http/ contains the browser cache. The Sidebar uses the files and subfolders in ~/.kde/share/apps/konqsidebartng Any folder specific view settings are put into .directory files in the individual folders. How do I clear out the history file? There are two histories: One is used for text completion in the Location Toolbar text entry box. To clear this right click on the text entry box and select Clear History . The other is the log of visited locations. Select the History page in the Sidebar, right click on an entry and choose Remove Entry (Del) to remove just that entry or Clear History to delete all entries. You can also use the application Sweeper from the kdeutils module which allows you to clean up cookies, favicons, web history and cache, form completion entries and cache policies of visited websites. How do I enable, disable or clear the browser cache? If you select Web BrowsingCache in the dialog launched by selecting SettingsConfigure Konqueror... , you will be presented with a dialog box that lets you disable the cache, clear it or set its size, and change the caching policy. How can I change the timeout values used by &konqueror; when web browsing? In the &systemsettings; category Network and Connectivity on the Network Settings Connection Preferences page. How do I set my home page - the page loaded on startup? &konqueror; has a Home Folder used in file manager mode and a Home Page used in browser mode. To change these settings launch SettingsConfigure KonquerorGeneral. To set the &konqueror; startup page in filemanager mode select Show Introduction Page, Show My Home Page, Show Blank Page or Show My Bookmarks from the drop down box labeled When Konqueror starts. In browser mode &konqueror; starts with the Home page entry. I can't find the answer to my question here. Take a look at http://www.konqueror.org/faq.html or http://www.konqueror.org/konq-java.html. You may find further information in the KDE Community Forums or on Konqueror's KDE Userbase page. &Pamela.Roberts; Credits and License &konqueror;. Program copyright 1999-2003, the &konqueror; developers: &David.Faure; &David.Faure.mail; developer (parts, JavaScript, I/O lib) and maintainer &Simon.Hausmann; &Simon.Hausmann.mail; developer (framework, parts) &Michael.Reiher; &Michael.Reiher.mail; developer (framework) &Mattias.Welk; &Mattias.Welk.mail; developer &Alexander.Neundorf; &Alexander.Neundorf.mail; developer (list views) &Michael.Brade; &Michael.Brade.mail; developer (list views, I/O lib) &Lars.Knoll; &Lars.Knoll.mail; developer (HTML rendering engine) &Antti.Koivisto; &Antti.Koivisto.mail; developer (HTML rendering engine) &Dirk.Mueller; &Dirk.Mueller.mail; developer (HTML rendering engine) &Peter.Kelly; &Peter.Kelly.mail; developer (HTML rendering engine, JavaScript) &Waldo.Bastian; &Waldo.Bastian.mail; developer (HTML rendering engine, I/O lib) &Matt.Koss; &Matt.Koss.mail; developer (I/O lib) &Alex.Zepeda; &Alex.Zepeda.mail; developer (I/O lib) &Stephan.Kulow; &Stephan.Kulow.mail; developer (HTML rendering engine, I/O lib, regression test framework) &Richard.J.Moore; &Richard.J.Moore.mail; developer (&Java; applet support) Dima Rogozin dima@mercury.co.il developer (&Java; applet support) Wynn Wilkes wynnw@calderasystems.com developer (&Java;2 manager support and other major improvements to applet support) &Harri.Porten; &Harri.Porten.mail; developer (JavaScript) Stefan Schimanski schimmi@kde.org developer (&Netscape; plugin support) &Carsten.Pfeiffer; &Carsten.Pfeiffer.mail; developer (framework) &George.Staikos; &George.Staikos.mail; developer (SSL support, Netscape plugins) Dawit Alemayehu adawit@kde.org developer (I/O lib, Authentication support) &Torsten.Rahn; &Torsten.Rahn.mail; Graphics / icons Torben Weis weis@kde.org kfm author &Joseph.Wenninger; &Joseph.Wenninger.mail; developer (navigation panel framework) &Stephan.Binner; &Stephan.Binner.mail; developer (misc stuff) Leo Savernik l.savernik@aon.at JavaScript access controls, per-domain policies extensions, HTML rendering engine Germain Garand germain@ebooksfrance.org Developer (HTML rendering engine) Zack Rusin zack@kde.org Developer (HTML rendering engine) Tobias Anton anton@stud.fbi.fh-darmstadt.de Developer (HTML rendering engine) Lubos Lunak l.lunak@kde.org Developer (HTML rendering engine) Maks Orlovich maksim@kde.org Developer (HTML rendering engine, JavaScript) Allan Sandfeld Jensen kde@carewolf.com Developer (HTML rendering engine) Apple Safari Developers Developer (HTML rendering engine, JavaScript) Koos Vriezen koos.vriezen@xs4all.nl Developer (Java applets and other embedded objects) Ivor Hewitt ivor@ivor.org Developer (AdBlock filter) Eduardo Robles Elvira edulix@gmail.com Developer (framework) Documentation copyright 2000-2003 &Erwan.Loisant; &Erwan.Loisant.mail; &Pamela.Roberts; &Pamela.Roberts.mail; Documentation updated for &kde; 3.2 by &Philip.Rodrigues; &Philip.Rodrigues.mail;. Documentation proofreading for &kde; 4.11 by David Palser davidpalser179@btinternet.com. &underFDL; &underGPL; Installation &konqueror; is part of the kdebase package which is an essential part of &kde;. For instructions on acquiring &kde; please see http://www.kde.org. For further information about &konqueror; you might like to visit http://www.konqueror.org. &underFDL; &documentation.index;