Installing Bluefish - Post-Installation Checklist: Difference between revisions
Bill Valaski (talk | contribs) m moved Man 2 ch02s07 to Installing Bluefish - Post-Installation Checklist: Title cleanup (BV) |
DrMartinus (talk | contribs) Removed outdated information and edited some wording |
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The first time you run Bluefish it will create a directory ~/.bluefish where all Bluefish's configuration options are stored. This includes all preferences, customized menus, highlighting-patterns, file history, etc. | The first time you run Bluefish it will create a directory ~/.bluefish where all Bluefish's configuration options are stored. This includes all preferences, customized menus, highlighting-patterns, file history, etc. | ||
Bluefish will work right out of the box, but you can and should take advantage of the many customizations available. Change the font in the main text view if you do not like | Bluefish will work right out of the box, but you can and should take advantage of the many customizations available. Change the font in the main text view if you do not like the one which is offered by default, remove unused tool bars, add or edit snippets and edit the list of browsers and external programs. | ||
If you are upgrading from a previous version, perhaps | If you are upgrading from a previous version, perhaps using the SVN, you should note that certain features may have changed. Please let us know if you encounter any difficulties. | ||
If your settings become corrupted, unusable, or you simply want to revert to the defaults, you may safely delete the ~/.bluefish directory. | If your settings become corrupted, unusable, or you simply want to revert to the defaults, you may safely delete the ~/.bluefish directory. |
Latest revision as of 18:25, 22 December 2022
The first time you run Bluefish it will create a directory ~/.bluefish where all Bluefish's configuration options are stored. This includes all preferences, customized menus, highlighting-patterns, file history, etc.
Bluefish will work right out of the box, but you can and should take advantage of the many customizations available. Change the font in the main text view if you do not like the one which is offered by default, remove unused tool bars, add or edit snippets and edit the list of browsers and external programs.
If you are upgrading from a previous version, perhaps using the SVN, you should note that certain features may have changed. Please let us know if you encounter any difficulties.
If your settings become corrupted, unusable, or you simply want to revert to the defaults, you may safely delete the ~/.bluefish directory.