Setting the Default Application

From NeoWiki

Revision as of 20:05, 3 November 2007 by Lorinda (Talk | contribs)
Jump to: navigation, search
This article is not up to date, or it needs structural or stylistic changes to conform with the rest of this wiki.


While NeoOffice properly claims it can open all of the document types it can open, it respects established settings of installed applications (e.g. Microsoft Word, TextEdit, WordPerfect, or Safari) and will not set itself as the default application for their document types if those applications are already installed on your Mac.

Contents

Setting NeoOffice as the default application for Microsoft Office and other documents

These methods also work for WordPerfect, and HTML, RTF and plain text documents.

General method

  1. In the Finder, elect an MS Office document e.g. foo.doc, foo.xls<tt>, etc.
  2. Select Get Info from the Finder's File} menu (or type cmd-I.
  3. Click on the disclosure triangle next to Open with: to expand that section.
  4. Choose the appropriate launcher application from the drop-down list.
  5. Click the Change All button and OK in the resulting dialogue.

Repeat these steps for each document type you want to open in NeoOffice (.ppt, .rtf, .html, etc.).

If NeoOffice is not listed in the "Open with:" drop-down list

  1. Select Other from the Open with: drop-down list.
  2. A window will open that looks like the standard Mac OS X open file-dialogue window. At the top of this window, there is selector that reads Recommended Applications; change this to read All applications.
  3. You should now be able to select any application in your "Applications" folder, including the ones that were previously greyed out. Select NeoOffice.
  4. Check the "Always open with..." box in the lower part of the window and confirm.
  5. Continue with step 5 above.


Caveats

  • Since some past Mac OS X security update from Apple, a user must have first launched the application before it can be set as the default.
  • Some document types come without extensions and sometimes different HFS+ file type codes end up being assigned for the same document type (for instance, some internet apps set WDBN instead of W6BN or W8BN as the file type for Microsoft Word .doc files). These have to be set seperately, so for such a document, the user might have to repeat on 4-6 "variations" of Word doc to get all Word docs, etc.
  • The method related above changes the default for all documents. To change the default for any one individual document, use Get Info, select the appropriate application and close the Info window (i.e., stop with step 4 in the General Method list).


This article in other languages:
Personal tools