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-<!--
-<?xml version="1.0" ?>
-<!DOCTYPE chapter PUBLIC "-//KDE//DTD DocBook XML V4.2-Based Variant V1.1//EN" "dtd/kdex.dtd">
--->
-<chapter id="configure">
-<title
->Configuring &kde;</title>
-
-<qandaset>
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->How do I set the language used by &kde;?</para>
-</question>
-
-<answer>
-<para
->There are two ways to set the language &kde; uses in the messages it will display:</para>
-
-<variablelist>
-<varlistentry
-><term
->Using the <application
->&kde; Control Centre</application
-></term>
-<listitem
-><para
->Fire up the <application
->&kde; Control Centre</application
-> and select <guimenu
->Regional &amp; Accessibility</guimenu
-> followed by <guimenuitem
->Country/Region &amp; Language</guimenuitem
->. You can select your language and location here. If &kde; cannot find a translation in the first language chosen, it will fall back on the default language. This is usually (American) English by default.</para>
-<note
-><para
->Using the <application
->&kde; Control Centre</application
-> is the preferred way of choosing languages in &kde;.</para
-></note
-></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-<varlistentry
-><term
->Using the <envar
->LANG</envar
-> environment variable</term>
-<listitem
-><para
->The second method uses the standard locale setting on your system. To change the language, simply set the environment variable <envar
->LANG</envar
-> accordingly. For example, if your shell is <application
->bash</application
->, execute <userinput
-><command
->export</command
-> <envar
->LANG</envar
->=de</userinput
-> to set German as the language used.</para
-></listitem>
-</varlistentry>
-</variablelist>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->Is there any keyboard switcher for international keyboards for &kde;?</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-<para
->Yes, you can configure it using the <application
->&kde; Control Centre</application
-> <guimenu
->Regional &amp; Accessibility</guimenu
-> <guimenuitem
->Keyboard Layout</guimenuitem
-> configuration page. </para>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->How do I replace the standard text login screen with the &kde; login screen?</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-<note
-><para
->Your distribution/&UNIX; flavour may have its own setup tools to change this (&eg; <application
->YaST</application
-> on &SuSE; &Linux;). This will be the safest way to enable the &kde; login screen. However, if for some reason you do not wish to use these tools, the following instructions may be useful.</para
-></note>
-<para
->First, you need to change to the <quote
->xdm runlevel</quote
-> (runlevel 5 on &RedHat; and &SuSE; systems) by editing your <filename
->/etc/inittab</filename
-> file. In the file, you should have a line saying <userinput
->id:3:initdefault:</userinput
->. Change it to <userinput
->id:5:initdefault:</userinput
->. Now, at the end of the file, comment out the following line: <literal
->x:5:respawn:/usr/bin/X11/xdm -nodaemon</literal
-> and replace it with <userinput
->x:5:respawn:<replaceable
->/opt/kde/</replaceable
->bin/kdm -nodaemon</userinput
->. <note
-><para
->The location of &kdm; may differ on your system.</para
-></note
-></para>
-<para
->For changes to take effect immediately, type <command
->init 5</command
-> (for &RedHat; systems) at the shell prompt. <caution
-><para
->It is risky to initiate a graphical login without checking beforehand whether it works. If it fails to work, you would be in for a hard time getting back....</para
-></caution
-></para>
-</answer>
-<answer>
-<para
->For FreeBSD, you should edit the file <filename
->/etc/ttys</filename
-> and change one of the lines that look like <programlisting
->ttyv8 "/usr/X11R6/bin/xdm -nodaemon" xterm off secure</programlisting
-> to instead say <userinput
->ttyv8 "/usr/local/bin/kdm -nodaemon" xterm off secure</userinput
->.</para>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-
-<para
->I would like to click the &LMB; anywhere on the desktop and have the <guimenu
->K</guimenu
-> menu displayed.</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-<para
->Open the <application
->&kde; Control Centre</application
-> and choose <menuchoice
-><guisubmenu
->Desktop</guisubmenu
-> <guisubmenu
->Behaviour</guisubmenu
-></menuchoice
->. You can now choose the behaviour of mouse clicks on the desktop. To have the <guimenu
->K</guimenu
-> menu open from a single &LMB; click, change the entry labelled <guilabel
->Left button</guilabel
-> to say <guilabel
->Application Menu</guilabel
->.</para>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->Where do I find information regarding &kde; themes?</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-<para
->Go to <ulink url="http://kde.themes.org/"
->http://kde.themes.org/</ulink
-> or <ulink url="http://www.kde-look.org"
->http://www.kde-look.org</ulink
->.</para>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->How do I change &MIME; Types?</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-<para
->If you are using &konqueror;, do this instead: first, open a &konqueror; window and choose <menuchoice
-><guimenu
->Settings</guimenu
-><guimenuitem
->Configure Konqueror</guimenuitem
-></menuchoice
->, then <guilabel
->File Associations</guilabel
->. Find the type you want to change (&eg; <literal
->text/english</literal
-> or <literal
->image/gif</literal
->), and set the application preference order to whatever you want.</para>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->&kde; (&kdm;) does not read my <filename
->.bash_profile</filename
->!</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-<para
->The login managers<application
->xdm</application
-> and &kdm; do not run a login shell, so <filename
->.profile</filename
->, <filename
->.bash_profile</filename
->, &etc; are not sourced. When the user logs in, <application
->xdm</application
-> runs <command
->Xstartup</command
-> as root and then <command
->Xsession</command
-> as user. So the normal practice is to add statements in <filename
->Xsession</filename
-> to source the user profile. Please edit your <filename
->Xsession</filename
-> and <filename
->.xsession</filename
-> files.</para>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->How do I use &TrueType; fonts in &kde;?</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-
-<para
->You need to install &TrueType; font support into your &X-Window; configuration. Please take a look at <ulink url="http://x.themes.org/"
->x.themes.org</ulink
-> for the fonts, and <ulink url="http://www.dcs.ed.ac.uk/home/jec/programs/xfsft/"
->xfsft: &TrueType; Font Support For X11</ulink
-> or <ulink url="http://X-TT.dsl.gr.jp/"
->X-&TrueType; Server Project Home Page</ulink
-> for the font servers.</para>
-
-<para
->If you have a bunch of &TrueType; fonts from &Microsoft; &Windows;, edit the <filename
->XF86Config</filename
-> file to get the fonts from the font folder. Then just tell &kde; to use these new fonts with the font administrator utility.</para>
-
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question>
-<para
->Is it possible to enter, show and work with the Euro Symbol in &kde;?</para>
-</question>
-<answer>
-<para
->Yes and no. For details, look here: <ulink url="http://www.koffice.org/kword/euro.php"
->http://www.koffice.org/kword/euro.php</ulink
->.</para>
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-<qandaentry>
-<question
-><para
->How do I run a program at &kde; startup?</para
-></question>
-
-<answer
-><para
->There are many ways to do that. If what you want to do is to run some scripts that would set some environment variables (for example, to start <command
->gpg-agent</command
->, <command
->ssh-agent</command
-> and others), you can put these scripts into <filename class="directory"
->$<envar
->KDEHOME</envar
->/env/</filename
-> and make sure their names end in <literal role="extension"
->.sh</literal
->. $<envar
->KDEHOME</envar
-> is usually a folder named <filename class="directory"
->.kde</filename
-> (note the period at the beginning) in your home folder. If you want scripts to be executed for all &kde; users, you can put them under <filename class="directory"
->$<envar
->KDEDIR</envar
->/env/</filename
->, where $<envar
->KDEDIR</envar
-> is the prefix &kde; was installed to (you can find this out using the command <userinput
-><command
->kde-config</command
-> --prefix</userinput
->).</para>
-<para
->If you wish to start a program after &kde; has started, you may want to use the <filename class="directory"
->Autostart</filename
-> folder. To add entries to the <filename class="directory"
->Autostart</filename
-> folder: <orderedlist>
-<listitem
-><para
->Open &konqueror;.</para>
-</listitem>
-<listitem
-><para
->Select <menuchoice
-><guimenu
->Go</guimenu
-><guimenuitem
->Autostart</guimenuitem
-> </menuchoice
-> from the menubar.</para>
-</listitem>
-<listitem
-><para
->Right-click in the window view area and select <menuchoice
-><guisubmenu
->Create New</guisubmenu
-><guisubmenu
->File</guisubmenu
-><guimenuitem
->Link to Application</guimenuitem
-> </menuchoice
-></para>
-</listitem>
-<listitem
-><para
->Click on the <guilabel
->Application</guilabel
-> tab in the window that appears and enter the name of the command to run in the <guilabel
->Command</guilabel
-> text box.</para>
-</listitem>
-</orderedlist>
-</para>
-
-</answer>
-</qandaentry>
-
-
-</qandaset>
-</chapter>