Linux

From Freeplane - free mind mapping and knowledge management software
Revision as of 10:04, 21 October 2012 by DimitryPolivaev (talk | contribs) (Text replace - "Category:System" to "Category:Documentation")

For UBUNTU, see here

To run freeplane in Linux, the following steps are recommended:

1. Download the Freeplane zipfile, and extract its contents to the folder of your choosing (e.g. ~/local/freeplane-xxxx , where xxxx is a version-number).

2. Create a freeplane symlink to ~/local/freeplane-xxxx:

ln -nsf ~/local/freeplane-xxxx ~/local/freeplane

3. (optional) If you have a ~/bin folder which is in your shell path, you can create a symlink to the freeplane start-script:

ln -s ~/local/freeplane/freeplane.sh ~/bin/freeplane

You should now be able to run freeplane from the commandline by simply typing freeplane.

4. Finally, to add an icon which will show up in your applications menu, save the following text to the file ~/.local/share/applications/freeplane.desktop :

[Desktop Entry]
Version=1.0
Encoding=UTF-8
Name=Freeplane
Exec=/bin/sh /home/YOUR-USERNAME/local/freeplane/freeplane.sh %f
Terminal=false
Icon=/home/YOUR-USERNAME/local/freeplane/freeplane.svg
Type=Application
MimeType=application/x-freemind
Categories=Application;Office;
GenericName=Freeplane
Comment=A free mind mapping tool

(for more details on why adding this file works, see the XDG Desktop Menu Specification, which is followed by all major linux desktop-environments)

Now, any time you wish to update your Freeplane application, just repeat steps 1 and 2.