4/5/2023 0 Comments Gdebi![]() The rest is displayed in terminal - that is: missing dependencies, if the case, I guess Dolphin qualifies as a GUI for our purpose. ~ or, by just creating a new context menu in Dolphin for deb files, triggering the same action, with the file ~/.local/share/kservices5/ServiceMenus/sktop of the form Icon=/usr/share/icons/breeze/mimetypes/22/application-x-deb.svgīut that will be seen by the system as a new application that could be associated to the deb file-type ![]() ~ by associating the deb files with an "application" that would trigger our action, in fact just the desktop file ~/.local/share/applications/sktop, created by us with the form Ĭomment=Install deb files in terminal with aptĮxec=konsole -hold -e sudo apt install %f ![]() I would also suggest an alternative where, while the deb file is installed with apt in terminal ( apt being the program that is run by Gdebi), the action is triggered with a GUI - namely Dolphin file manager - in two possible ways: But when it does, it doesn't tell you if and what dependencies are missing (it simply closes), and, even worse, it doesn't list the supplementary dependencies before installing them. On the other hand (like Gdebi) it tells you what supplementary dependencies are installed when executing a deb file.Ĭompared to gdebi, Discover is similar mostly in that it is able to install from deb files (unlike something like Synaptic or its KDE alternatives, Muon and Apper). Qapt Package Installer ( qapt-deb-installer) is meant as similar to Gdebi, but, while it tells you when dependencies are missing, it doesn't list those missing dependencies.As a complementary answer in relation to other answers and comments:
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