171 results for “topic:xdg”
A shell script which checks your $HOME for unwanted files and directories.
☝️send desktop notifications from your Rust app.
Go implementation of the XDG Base Directory Specification and XDG user directories
A Python package for determining platform-specific directories (e.g. user data, config, cache, logs). Handles the differences between macOS, Windows, Linux/Unix, and Android so you don't have to.
mac OS, Arch Linux, and Debian/Ubuntu + Neovim
A Rust wrapper around XDG portals DBus interfaces
moved to https://codeberg.org/dirs/directories-jvm
TUI for managing XDG default applications
a low-level library that provides config/cache/data paths, following the respective conventions on Linux, macOS and Windows
A C++ library to look for special directories like "My Documents" and "%APPDATA%" so that you do not need to write Linux, Windows or Mac OS X specific code
Qt File Manager
a polkit agent in 145 lines of code, because polkit is dumb and none of the other agents worked
Desktop Independent Power Manager
Powerful and versatile MIME sniffing package using pre-compiled glob patterns, magic number signatures, XML document namespaces, and tree magic for mounted volumes, generated from the XDG shared-mime-info database.
🏡 Personal dotfiles configuration
A cross-platform Go library to get configuration and cache directories.
Personal configuration for zsh, neovim, tmux and other tools
Get cross-platform XDG Base Directories or their equivalents. Works with Linux, Windows, or MacOS.
Node.js implementation for the MPRIS D-Bus Interface Specification to create a mediaplayer service
🏠 My personal dotfiles, following the XDG Base Directory Standard.
A XDG Base Directory Specification implementation.
An 'Open with' dialog for opening files in external applications from Dired.
FreeDesktop.org (xdg) Specs implemented in Go
A cross platform implementation of the XDG Directory Spec
Minimal app menu with xmenu
directories is an OCaml library that provides configuration, cache and data paths (and more!) following the suitable conventions on Linux, macOS and Windows. The following conventions are used: XDG Base Directory Specification and xdg-user-dirs on Linux, Known Folders on Windows, Standard Directories on macOS.
A GUI program to view and change your default programs' preferences (which program should open which type of file) using the XDG Specifications
An implementation of the XDG Base Directory specifications
A simple way to identify unused applications data in user directories such as ~./config and ~/.cache.
Configure non-conforming applications to use XDG Base Directory specification