Evite burlas no apoio. Nunca iremos solicitar que telefone ou envie uma mensagem de texto para um número de telefone ou que partilhe informações pessoais. Por favor, reporte atividades suspeitas utilizando a opção "Reportar abuso".

Saber mais

Windows 7: associating preferred editor with .html makes think it's not default browser

  • 2 respostas
  • 1 tem este problema
  • 1 visualização
  • Última resposta por max_well

I'm running Windows 7 Pro x64 and FF 3.6.13 .

My preferred editor for editing .html files is gvim. However, when I permanently associated .html files to be opened by gvim, the next time I start FF it says it is not the default browser and if I want to set it to default.

When I do this, make FF my default browser, and then double click any .html file, it doesn't open in my preferred editor but in FF.

I always thought default browser primarily means for browsing the web, but in my case it clashes with how I prefer to work with local documents.

This is tested with a new, empty profile.

I'm running Windows 7 Pro x64 and FF 3.6.13 . My preferred editor for '''editing''' .html files is gvim. However, when I permanently associated .html files to be opened by gvim, the next time I start FF it says it is not the default browser and if I want to set it to default. When I do this, make FF my default browser, and then double click any .html file, it doesn't open in my preferred editor but in FF. I always thought default browser primarily means for browsing the web, but in my case it clashes with how I prefer to work with local documents. This is tested with a new, empty profile.

Todas as respostas (2)

Don't let Firefox test at startup:
Tools > Options > Advanced > General: "System Defaults": [ ] "Always check to see if Firefox is the default browser on startup"

I understand, but I want it as default browser, but not default file opener.

I also want that check in case another browser comes along bad and takes my FF away.

I don't know, for me these are two separate things, but it seems they aren't. Confusing.