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how to get app icon with name of the app

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  • JonBJ JonB

    @saber
    So what does ls -l /usr/share/applications/Audacious show you?

    S Offline
    S Offline
    saber
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    @JonB

    ls: cannot access '/usr/share/applications/Audacious': No such file or directory

    but there is the desktop file.

    if this is not the way , how to do that properly?

    JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • S saber

      @JonB

      ls: cannot access '/usr/share/applications/Audacious': No such file or directory

      but there is the desktop file.

      if this is not the way , how to do that properly?

      JonBJ Offline
      JonBJ Offline
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by JonB
      #8

      @saber
      So if that file doesn't exist you're not going to get anything good using it.

      qDebug()<< info.isReadable(); is giving me false.But there is icon on that path.
      ...
      but there is the desktop file.

      What do you mean by "But there is icon on that path." ? Where is what desktop file?

      What made you choose to write:
      QFileInfo info("/usr/share/applications/Audacious");
      ?

      1 Reply Last reply
      1
      • S saber

        @JonB

        ls: cannot access '/usr/share/applications/Audacious': No such file or directory

        but there is the desktop file.

        if this is not the way , how to do that properly?

        JonBJ Offline
        JonBJ Offline
        JonB
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        @saber
        Purely at a guess as to what you're trying to say, combined with what @Devopia53 is trying to suggest, I would say you need to do one of two things.

        1. Find the .desktop file, which is a text file, and inspect it to see what icon file the desktop uses. Now, this may indeed by in /usr/share/applications, or perhaps ~/.local/share/..., but will be named with a .desktop suffix, e.g. perhaps /usr/share/applications/Audacious.desktop (be careful about capitalization under Linux). Use locate or find to search for suitable file names.

        2. For @Devopia53's way, find the executable for Audacious. This will not be in /usr/share/applications, but perhaps in /usr/bin or maybe /usr/local/bin or elsewhere. Again use locate or find, or even which. Then try his code. However, personally I am unconvinced this will work under Linux where, unlike Windows, icons are not embedded in executables. But you could try. I think #1 will work instead.

        A 1 Reply Last reply
        2
        • JonBJ JonB

          @saber
          Purely at a guess as to what you're trying to say, combined with what @Devopia53 is trying to suggest, I would say you need to do one of two things.

          1. Find the .desktop file, which is a text file, and inspect it to see what icon file the desktop uses. Now, this may indeed by in /usr/share/applications, or perhaps ~/.local/share/..., but will be named with a .desktop suffix, e.g. perhaps /usr/share/applications/Audacious.desktop (be careful about capitalization under Linux). Use locate or find to search for suitable file names.

          2. For @Devopia53's way, find the executable for Audacious. This will not be in /usr/share/applications, but perhaps in /usr/bin or maybe /usr/local/bin or elsewhere. Again use locate or find, or even which. Then try his code. However, personally I am unconvinced this will work under Linux where, unlike Windows, icons are not embedded in executables. But you could try. I think #1 will work instead.

          A Offline
          A Offline
          ambershark
          wrote on last edited by ambershark
          #10

          @JonB said in how to get app icon with name of the app:

          However, personally I am unconvinced this will work under Linux where, unlike Windows, icons are not embedded in executables. But you could try. I think #1 will work instead.

          Yea it definitely isn't going to work on linux. I even tested it to be sure since I was only about 95% sure it wouldn't work.

          @saber Icons in linux are not set in the binaries. If you refer to my post above you'll find exactly how to deal with icons in linux. :)

          QFileIconProvider will not work in linux. You will need to open the file (in your case /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop) then read it for the Icon line. Keep in mind the Icon line is not guaranteed to be there since icons are not required in linux. Also note, you forgot the .desktop in your path above which is why the file was not found. Also, you used "Audacious" and on my file system it is lower case, i.e. audacious.desktop.

          And the last thing to be aware of is the Icon entry can be something simple like in Audacious's case, it is:

          Icon=audacious 
          

          There's no extension or path. This will look in /usr/share/pixmaps or other places like /usr/share/icons... which is the case for audacious:

          /usr/share/icons/hicolor/48x48/apps/audacious.png
          /usr/share/icons/hicolor/scalable/apps/audacious.svg
          

          My L-GPL'd C++ Logger github.com/ambershark-mike/sharklog

          S 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • A ambershark

            @JonB said in how to get app icon with name of the app:

            However, personally I am unconvinced this will work under Linux where, unlike Windows, icons are not embedded in executables. But you could try. I think #1 will work instead.

            Yea it definitely isn't going to work on linux. I even tested it to be sure since I was only about 95% sure it wouldn't work.

            @saber Icons in linux are not set in the binaries. If you refer to my post above you'll find exactly how to deal with icons in linux. :)

            QFileIconProvider will not work in linux. You will need to open the file (in your case /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop) then read it for the Icon line. Keep in mind the Icon line is not guaranteed to be there since icons are not required in linux. Also note, you forgot the .desktop in your path above which is why the file was not found. Also, you used "Audacious" and on my file system it is lower case, i.e. audacious.desktop.

            And the last thing to be aware of is the Icon entry can be something simple like in Audacious's case, it is:

            Icon=audacious 
            

            There's no extension or path. This will look in /usr/share/pixmaps or other places like /usr/share/icons... which is the case for audacious:

            /usr/share/icons/hicolor/48x48/apps/audacious.png
            /usr/share/icons/hicolor/scalable/apps/audacious.svg
            
            S Offline
            S Offline
            saber
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            @ambershark
            yes understood the linux icon system.
            just tried @Devopia53 code if i could find a short solution .

            @JonB i also tried lower case app name .that gives me a UNKNOWN file icon.
            in /usr/share/applications/ all the file name are in capital latter
            0_1527049126913_k.png

            also i tried this

                QString name = "chromium";
                QIcon   icon =  QIcon::fromTheme("applications-" + name.toLower());
                ui->start->setIcon(icon);
            

            this should give me the icon but dose't .

            this gives me the icon

                QString name = "chromium";
                QIcon   icon =  QIcon::fromTheme(name.toLower());
                ui->start->setIcon(icon);
            

            but it gives me the icon not from default theme . it gives the icon from other installed theme.

            JonBJ A 2 Replies Last reply
            0
            • S saber

              @ambershark
              yes understood the linux icon system.
              just tried @Devopia53 code if i could find a short solution .

              @JonB i also tried lower case app name .that gives me a UNKNOWN file icon.
              in /usr/share/applications/ all the file name are in capital latter
              0_1527049126913_k.png

              also i tried this

                  QString name = "chromium";
                  QIcon   icon =  QIcon::fromTheme("applications-" + name.toLower());
                  ui->start->setIcon(icon);
              

              this should give me the icon but dose't .

              this gives me the icon

                  QString name = "chromium";
                  QIcon   icon =  QIcon::fromTheme(name.toLower());
                  ui->start->setIcon(icon);
              

              but it gives me the icon not from default theme . it gives the icon from other installed theme.

              JonBJ Offline
              JonBJ Offline
              JonB
              wrote on last edited by JonB
              #12

              @saber
              Sorry, don't understand your problem now.

              As both I & @ambershark have said, the file you need to look at should be at /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop, exactly as that is written. It should be text file you can look at which will show you, in its Icon=... line, the path to the icon file used by the "Audacious" application. @ambershark has even shown you the content, naming a .png & a svg path for the icon file. Which I believe is exactly what you are looking for.

              P.S. You wrote:

              in /usr/share/applications/ all the file name are in capital latter

              I think you'll find that's just whatever the application you're showing in your screenshot has chosen to display them as. Try ls /usr/share/applications if you want to know what the filenames actually are!

              1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • S saber

                @ambershark
                yes understood the linux icon system.
                just tried @Devopia53 code if i could find a short solution .

                @JonB i also tried lower case app name .that gives me a UNKNOWN file icon.
                in /usr/share/applications/ all the file name are in capital latter
                0_1527049126913_k.png

                also i tried this

                    QString name = "chromium";
                    QIcon   icon =  QIcon::fromTheme("applications-" + name.toLower());
                    ui->start->setIcon(icon);
                

                this should give me the icon but dose't .

                this gives me the icon

                    QString name = "chromium";
                    QIcon   icon =  QIcon::fromTheme(name.toLower());
                    ui->start->setIcon(icon);
                

                but it gives me the icon not from default theme . it gives the icon from other installed theme.

                A Offline
                A Offline
                ambershark
                wrote on last edited by ambershark
                #13

                @saber said in how to get app icon with name of the app:

                /usr/share/applications/ all the file name are in capital latter

                I would double check that whatever file manager you are using there isn't changing them to the names that are inside the .desktop file. I'm pretty sure it is. I've never seen something like Add/Remove Software.desktop on a linux file system. If nothing else using a path symbol (/) in a filename would be just begging for trouble.

                My bet is if you do the ls /usr/share/applications they will be all (or at least mostly) in lowercase.

                As for the QIcon::fromTheme stuff. I have no idea. I've never used it. It may work for you but from the sounds of it, it's not.

                Here's a quick shell command to get the name of the icon file (sorry don't have time to write it up in Qt since I'm on my way out the door):

                $ cat /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop | grep Icon | gawk -F= '{ print($NF); }'
                audacious
                

                Then you could even link that to get you the actual filenames:

                $ find /usr/share/icons -name "$(cat /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop | grep Icon | gawk -F= '{ print($NF); }')*.png"
                /usr/share/icons/hicolor/48x48/apps/audacious.png
                

                There's a bit more to it than that since they could be full path names in the Icon in the desktop file or they could point to a place like /usr/share/pixmaps. But that's essentially it. You could even shell out to bash and use those commands if you were too lazy to use QFile to read it and find the icon file.

                Either way, here's the solution in pseudocode:

                Open filename /usr/share/applications/whatever.desktop
                Read file looking for line starting with Icon=
                Parse Icon= to get the filename
                if filename is absolute or relative path
                   return filename
                else
                   check /usr/share/icons/* for filename.* (image formats only here, like svg, png)
                   if found
                      return full path + filename
                   else check /usr/share/pixmaps
                   if found
                       return full path + filename
                return failure
                

                Then once you get a filename, just open it and load it with QIcon.

                My L-GPL'd C++ Logger github.com/ambershark-mike/sharklog

                JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                3
                • A ambershark

                  @saber said in how to get app icon with name of the app:

                  /usr/share/applications/ all the file name are in capital latter

                  I would double check that whatever file manager you are using there isn't changing them to the names that are inside the .desktop file. I'm pretty sure it is. I've never seen something like Add/Remove Software.desktop on a linux file system. If nothing else using a path symbol (/) in a filename would be just begging for trouble.

                  My bet is if you do the ls /usr/share/applications they will be all (or at least mostly) in lowercase.

                  As for the QIcon::fromTheme stuff. I have no idea. I've never used it. It may work for you but from the sounds of it, it's not.

                  Here's a quick shell command to get the name of the icon file (sorry don't have time to write it up in Qt since I'm on my way out the door):

                  $ cat /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop | grep Icon | gawk -F= '{ print($NF); }'
                  audacious
                  

                  Then you could even link that to get you the actual filenames:

                  $ find /usr/share/icons -name "$(cat /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop | grep Icon | gawk -F= '{ print($NF); }')*.png"
                  /usr/share/icons/hicolor/48x48/apps/audacious.png
                  

                  There's a bit more to it than that since they could be full path names in the Icon in the desktop file or they could point to a place like /usr/share/pixmaps. But that's essentially it. You could even shell out to bash and use those commands if you were too lazy to use QFile to read it and find the icon file.

                  Either way, here's the solution in pseudocode:

                  Open filename /usr/share/applications/whatever.desktop
                  Read file looking for line starting with Icon=
                  Parse Icon= to get the filename
                  if filename is absolute or relative path
                     return filename
                  else
                     check /usr/share/icons/* for filename.* (image formats only here, like svg, png)
                     if found
                        return full path + filename
                     else check /usr/share/pixmaps
                     if found
                         return full path + filename
                  return failure
                  

                  Then once you get a filename, just open it and load it with QIcon.

                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                  #14

                  @ambershark
                  Why would you go

                  cat /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop | grep Icon
                  

                  when you could just go

                  grep Icon /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop
                  

                  saving a process & a pipe?

                  Also, it's many years since I did an awk (I'm a perl man), but can't you just do for the whole thing:

                  gawk -F= '/^Icon/ { print($NF); }' /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop
                  

                  saving another process & pipe?

                  :)

                  A 1 Reply Last reply
                  3
                  • JonBJ JonB

                    @ambershark
                    Why would you go

                    cat /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop | grep Icon
                    

                    when you could just go

                    grep Icon /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop
                    

                    saving a process & a pipe?

                    Also, it's many years since I did an awk (I'm a perl man), but can't you just do for the whole thing:

                    gawk -F= '/^Icon/ { print($NF); }' /usr/share/applications/audacious.desktop
                    

                    saving another process & pipe?

                    :)

                    A Offline
                    A Offline
                    ambershark
                    wrote on last edited by ambershark
                    #15

                    @JonB Lol you totally could. Using cat is an old habit of mine and I catch myself doing it all the time especially with grep... and same with grep. It could definitely all be done in gawk but usually when I do stuff like that it is to not have to spend time looking at command line help on something like gawk and just using what tool I know off the top of my head. :)

                    Edit: after I wrote this I was copying a file over ssh and throwing it through xz on both ends and I did: cat - | xz -dc - > images/win10-base-setup.qcow2, and immediately laughed when I saw I was using cat - again and only to use - in xz. The whole cat was completely useless. Made me laugh as I thought about this post figured I'd come show ya my bad cat habits in action. ;)

                    My L-GPL'd C++ Logger github.com/ambershark-mike/sharklog

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • S Offline
                      S Offline
                      saber
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      here is the code

                      // get all the istalled theme
                          QDirIterator it("/usr/share/icons", QDir::Dirs | QDir::NoDotAndDotDot);
                          QStringList iconThemes;
                          while (it.hasNext()) {
                            it.next();
                            iconThemes.append(it.fileName());
                          }
                      
                      // select the first icon theme from the iconThemes list.
                      // i is the app icon
                      QIcon i =QIcon::fromTheme(appName, QIcon::fromTheme(iconThemes.at(1);));
                      
                      

                      thanks

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      1

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