Beziercode 1 26 download free. It’s always by your side! 103 languages It understands 103 languages. Mate also teaches you how to pronounce correctly. Airy 3 6 200 download free. It shows phonetic transcription, transliteration and can speak out words and texts with correct accent. Full-page translation Mate can translate entire web pages within one mouse-click! Looking for an easy and fun to use language translator app? Then download Mate Translate today. Mate Translate works in 103 languages and can perform text translations. Freemium $ $ $ Mac Android iPhone Android Tablet iPad. Apple Watch Microsoft Edge Chrome Apple Messages Opera Telegram bot API Firefox. As a result, Vala Panel AppMenu provides global menu support for GTK2, GTK3, Qt4 and Qt5 applications, as well as applications like Firefox, Thunderbird, Google Chrome / Chromium, and LibreOffice. For MATE, Vala Panel AppMenu requires MATE Panel built with GTK3 (so for Ubuntu, it requires Ubuntu MATE 16.10 and newer). Microsoft Translator is not available for Firefox but there are some alternatives with similar functionality. The most popular Firefox alternative is S3.Translator, which is free.If that doesn't suit you, our users have ranked more than 50 alternatives to Microsoft Translator and seven of them are available for Firefox so hopefully you can find a suitable replacement. Translation history will soon only be available when you are signed in and will be centrally managed within My Activity.Past history will be cleared during this upgrade, so make sure to save translations you want to remember for ease of access later.
A while back I wrote about TopMenu, a panel plugin that provides global menu (AppMenu) support for MATE, then also included support for Xfce and LXDE.
The problem with TopMenu is that it only partially supports GTK3, it doesn't support LibreOffice, and with Ubuntu 16.04, it doesn't support Qt (4 or 5) applications.
Here's where Vala Panel AppMenu comes in. Vala Panel AppMenu is a global menu panel applet for Xfce, MATE and Vala panels, which uses unity-gtk-module as its backend, and it works with all the applications supported by Unity's AppMenu.
As a result, Vala Panel AppMenu provides global menu support for GTK2, GTK3, Qt4 and Qt5 applications, as well as applications like Firefox, Thunderbird, Google Chrome / Chromium, and LibreOffice.
For MATE, Vala Panel AppMenu requires MATE Panel built with GTK3 (so for Ubuntu, it requires Ubuntu MATE 16.10 and newer). Its README also mentions that to build Vala Panel AppMenu, you'll need GTK 3.12 or newer, GLib 2.40 or newer, valac 0.24 or newer and libbamf 0.5.0 or newer.
Here's Vala Panel AppMenu in action with Chromium, Firefox, Gedit (GTK3), LibreOffice, VLC (Qt5), and Thunar (GTK2):
Here's an Ubuntu MATE 16.10 screenshot as well:
Vala Panel AppMenu is not perfect though, and I did encounter a few issues in my test:
You may also want to check out the Vala Panel AppMenu issues page on GitHub. Install and set up Vala AppMenu in Ubuntu (MATE/Xubuntu) or Linux Mint (Xfce) via PPAIf you don't use Ubuntu or Linux Mint, you can grab the Vala Panel AppMenu source from GitHub. Arch Linux users can install Vala Panel AppMenu via AUR. For Ubuntu or Linux Mint, see the instructions below.
Vala AppMenu is available in the WebUpd8 MATE and Xfce PPA.
For Ubuntu MATE, the plugin is only available for Ubuntu 16.10, because it requires MATE Panel built with GTK3, and that is only the case for Ubuntu 16.10 and newer.
For Xfce, the Vala AppMenu plugin is available for Xubuntu 16.10 and 16.04, as well as Linux Mint Xfce 18.x.
To add the WebUpd8 MATE and Xfce PPA and update the software sources, use the following commands:
Then, install the Vala AppMenu plugin / applet: - for Xfce (Xubuntu 16.10, 16.04 / Linux Mint Xfce 18.x): - for MATE (Ubuntu MATE 16.10):
2. Disable the menu from being displayed in application windows (so it's only displayed on the panel; without this, you'll get double menus, in both the panel and application windows).
2.A. for Xfce, simply run the command below:2.B. for MATE, you'll need to edit the ~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini file (if this file doesn't exist, create it) and in this file, add the following under '[Settings]': Here are step by step instructions for doing this. Firstly, create the ~/.config/gtk-3.0/ folder in case it doesn't exist, by using the following command: Then open ~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini with Pluma text editor: If this file has a '[Settings]' section, paste under it the following: If the file is empty, paste the following in this file: .. and save the file. Unfortunately, for MATE, this will not disable the menu from being displayed in app windows for GTK2 (I mentioned this in the issues section above). 3. Restart the session (logout, then log back in). 4. Add the Vala AppMenu applet to the panel (and how to change its position on the MATE panel).
4.A. For Xfce, right click the panel on which you want to add Vala AppMenu to, and select Panel > Panel Preferences (I prefer this to directly adding the applet to the panel, because it also allows moving it to the desired position), and on the Items tab, click '+' and add 'AppMenu Plugin' to the panel:
You can move Vala AppMenu to the desired position on the panel via the Items tab from the Xfce4 Panel Preferences.
If you have TopMenu installed, make sure you don't mix the two!
4.B. For MATE, right click the panel, select 'Add to panel', then search for 'Global Application Menu' and click 'Add':
Unfortunately there's no easy way of moving the applet to the desired position on the panel. That's because the Vala Panel AppMenu responds in the same way to both left and right click, and there's no area to access its context menu.
To change the global menu position on the MATE panel, you'll need Dconf Editor, which can be installed using the following command:
Next, launch Dconf Editor, navigate to org > mate > panel > objects and in the 'objects' tree, you should see some items called 'object-1', 'object-2' and so on. Start from the last object and see which has the 'applet-iid' value set to 'AppMenuAppletFactory:AppMenuApplet'. Note: you may have multiple applets ('object-1', 'object-2', etc.) with the 'applet-iid' value of 'AppMenuApplet..' - in that case you'll need to change the settings for the last one (the higher number).
The 'position' value represents the number of pixels between the left-hand side of the panel and the applet position. So once you find the right applet, change its position value to suit your needs (try to approximate it, if the other applets are locked, a lower value than the actual position will work in some cases).
In my case, I have a menu, a Firefox launcher, and a separator and I want to move the global menu next to them, so I set the 'position' value to '100':
After you change the position, you'll need to restart the MATE panel to apply the changes (or logout/login). To do this, open a terminal and type:
5. Optional: enable Vala Appmenu (global menu) for Firefox and Thunderbird. By default, Vala AppMenu will only display the Thunderbird and Firefox Unity actions (quicklists) on the panel. To enable the full Firefox and Thunderbird menu on the panel, you must launch Firefox and Thunderbird with 'UBUNTU_MENUPROXY=0'. You can do this automatically (by copying the Firefox and Thunderbird .desktop files from /usr/share/applications to ~/.local/share/applications/ so they are not overwritten when they receive updates, and modify the .desktop files there) for both Firefox and Thunderbird, by using the commands below: Undo the changesBelow you'll find the exact steps required to undo the changes made by following the instructions mentioned above. 1. Remove Vala AppMenu: If you are sure (Important! don't remove these packages if you also use Unity) that the Unity GTK module and AppMenu packages are not used by any other packages on your system, also purge them by using the following command: 2. Undo the MATE/Xfce menu disable settings Mate Translate Firefox Extension2.A. For Xfce, use the following commands:2.B. For MATE, open ~/.config/gtk-3.0/settings.ini with a text editor - the command below uses Pluma to open this file: Firefox Auto TranslateAnd from this file, remove the following two lines:![]() If this file was created by following the instructions in this article (was empty or it didn't exist before), you can simply remove it by using the following command: 3. Restart the session (logout, then log back in) 4. If you applied the optional Thunderbird and Firefox tweaks mentioned above, you can undo this step by simply removing their .desktop files from ~/.local/share/applications/. To do this from a terminal, use the following commands: Download Mate Translate For FirefoxMate Translate Firefox Download
Thanks to WebUupd8 reader omg2090 for the tip and information (check out his comment for how to build this from source and an extra tweak).
Comments are closed.
|
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |