Starting Other Programs (KDE3 Architecture)

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Revision as of 17:41, 9 January 2022 by Blu256 (talk | contribs) (Updated for TDE)
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Information on this page is applicable to TDE
This page contains archived KDE 3.x content from various sources which is directly applicable to (or has been updated for) the Trinity Desktop Environment.

In TDE there are several ways to start other programs from within your application. Here is a short summary of your options with reasons why you should or should not use them.

fork + exec

You never want to use this unless you have a very good reason why it is impossible to use KProcess.

TDEProcess

You want to use TDEProcess class if you need to start a new process which needs to be a child of your process, e.g. because you want to catch stdout/stderr or need to send it data via stdin. You should never use this to start other Trinity applications. If you need to send/receive text like data to/from the process, you are probably better off with KProcIO.

KProcIO

Like TDEProcess. Unlike TDEProcess, the KProcIO class actually makes it easy to send data to and receive data from the process.

startServiceByDesktopPath

Preferred way to launch desktop (Trinity/KDE/Gnome/X) applications or Trinity services. The application/service must have a .desktop file. It will make use of tdeinit for increased startup performance and lower memory usage. These benefits only apply to applications available as tdeinit loadable module.

KRun

Generic way to open documents/applications/shell commands. Uses startServiceBy.... where applicable. Offers the additional benefit of startup-notification.
KRun can start any application, from the binary or the desktop file, it will determine the mimetype of a file before running the preferred handler for it, and it can also start shell commands. This makes KRun the recommended way to run another program in Trinity.


Initial Author: Waldo Bastian