Oct-29-2016, 04:33 AM
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Oct-29-2016, 06:09 AM
Hello!
First of, what distribution do you use?
The simplest way to start a program as user login is to do it as adding at the end of .bashrc which is located in the user home directory, a line
First of, what distribution do you use?
The simplest way to start a program as user login is to do it as adding at the end of .bashrc which is located in the user home directory, a line
........... libreofficeThe dots represent the rest of the file
Oct-29-2016, 12:44 PM
Oct-29-2016, 12:56 PM
(Oct-29-2016, 06:09 AM)wavic Wrote: [ -> ]The simplest way to start a program as user login is to do it as adding at the end of .bashrc which is located in the user home directory, a lineThis is a really odd solution, but i guess it would work. Normally i try to keep my startups cleared because i dont want crap to run automatically. NOTE: If you use this method and you have libreoffice closed, every time you open a new terminal, libreoffice starts

ubuntu
http://askubuntu.com/questions/228304/ho...t-start-up
Quote:why are you asking in the bar?Where else would it go on a python forum?
Oct-29-2016, 03:00 PM
(Oct-29-2016, 12:56 PM)metulburr Wrote: [ -> ]You are right. I didn't think about it because I use Guake and tmux. .bash_profile then :)(Oct-29-2016, 06:09 AM)wavic Wrote: [ -> ]The simplest way to start a program as user login is to do it as adding at the end of .bashrc which is located in the user home directory, a lineThis is a really odd solution, but i guess it would work. Normally i try to keep my startups cleared because i dont want crap to run automatically. NOTE: If you use this method and you have libreoffice closed, every time you open a new terminal, libreoffice startsand for someone like me thats 100's of times per day.
ubuntu
http://askubuntu.com/questions/228304/ho...t-start-up
Quote:why are you asking in the bar?Where else would it go on a python forum?
Pages: 1 2