You can look at my desktop file but extra spaces at the end of line
aren't easy to see and other posters have said that they are
problematic.<br><br>[Desktop Entry]<br>Version=1.0.0<br>Encoding=UTF-8<br>Icon=airmiles<br>X-Window-Icon=airmiles<br>Name=AirMiles<br>Type=Application<br>Exec=/usr/bin//airmiles<br>X-Osso-Type=application/x-executable<br>X-Osso-Service=com.nokia.airmiles<br><br>While I've gotten the icon to display in the Task Navigator I still haven't gotten it to display in the Application Switcher. So you may want to look at some others. That's easier than you may think. It seems that a deb file is just a special sort of archive that you can open with many programs, <br><br>On WINDOWS I've been using 7-zip to look at deb files. It shows two files, you want to open 'data.tar.gz' and then 'data.tar' and finally navigate to '\usr\share\applications\hildon' to find 'appname.desktop' and you can also peek around directories 'icons' and 'pixmaps'. I believe that the one that appears on the task manager is one found in <br><br>\usr\share\icons\hicolor\scalable\hildon\<br><br>It must be a png file and 64 pixels wide and either 64 or 54 high, I've seen both used and both sizes stated in various documents. <br><br><div>
</div>
My own modest application is here https://garage.maemo.org/projects/airmiles if you want to see the tree structure that I used<br><BR>
--
<div> Want an e-mail address like mine? </b><br>
Get a <b>free e-mail </b>account today at <a href="http://www.mail.com/Product.aspx" target="_blank">www.mail.com</a>!</div>