There are, however, a number of common tasks related to menu items that do not vary across distributions, and we'll describe those here. First, there are context menus for individual menu items. To see them, right-click on a menu item (this is easier if you do not keep the left mouse button pressed while navigating your menus). The possible actions are:
The menu customization tools are one of the simplest and most obvious improvements in the GNOME 2 platform. To alter your menus, just open your Nautilus file manager and type "applications:///" into the location bar. The Applications display represents your menus and submenus as folders, with item launchers in them. Drag items around and move, copy, delete, or rename them as you see fit.
To add a submenu, right-click in an empty spot in the folder and select New Folder, then rename the folder, or right-click on it to set its name and icon.
To add a launcher, right-click in an empty spot in the folder and select New Launcher, then enter the name of the application, type in any pop-up text you want to describe it, and enter or browse for the command that starts the application itself. If you're not sure where that is, look in the /usr/bin directory, or use the which or locate commands (see Chapter 2) to find it.
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