You could possibly also make a shell script that does this automatically. I believe most flatpak ids follow a pattern such as com.github.user.package, for github projects for example. So you could loop through all installed flatpaks, extract the name, and then add the alias.
You can symlink /var/lib/flatpak/exports/bin/org.gnome.Lollypop (if you are using a system installation) or ~/.local/share/flatpak/exports/bin/org.gnome.Lollypop (if you are using a uset installation) to ~/.local/bin/lollypop and run it as lollypop.
Well, Flatpak installs aliases, so as long as your distribution - or yourself - add the <installation>/exports/bin path to $PATH, then you’ll be able to use the application IDs to launch them.
And if you want to have the Flatpak available under a different name than its ID, you can always symlink the exported bin to whatever name you’d personally prefer.
I’ve got Blender set up that way myself, with the org.blender.Blender bin symlinked to /usr/local/bin/blender, so that some older applications that expect to be able to simply interop with it are able to.
Flatpak is nice but I really would like to see a way to run flatpakked application transparently e.g. don’t have to
flatpak run org.gnome.Lollypop
and can just run the app via
Lollypop
You could make aliases for each program, but I agree, there should be a way to set it up so they resolve automatically.
You could possibly also make a shell script that does this automatically. I believe most flatpak ids follow a pattern such as com.github.user.package, for github projects for example. So you could loop through all installed flatpaks, extract the name, and then add the alias.
Agreed, but I also feel like such a thing should be included with Flatpak by default instead of leaving it to the users to solve.
You can symlink
/var/lib/flatpak/exports/bin/org.gnome.Lollypop
(if you are using a system installation) or~/.local/share/flatpak/exports/bin/org.gnome.Lollypop
(if you are using a uset installation) to~/.local/bin/lollypop
and run it aslollypop
.Well, Flatpak installs aliases, so as long as your distribution - or yourself - add the
<installation>/exports/bin
path to$PATH
, then you’ll be able to use the application IDs to launch them.And if you want to have the Flatpak available under a different name than its ID, you can always symlink the exported bin to whatever name you’d personally prefer.
I’ve got Blender set up that way myself, with the
org.blender.Blender
bin symlinked to/usr/local/bin/blender
, so that some older applications that expect to be able to simply interop with it are able to.put flatpak in your PATH and you can youse the app name like normal
I just run them raw, like just
org.gnome.Lollypop
Not ideal, but it’s what I do
It’s fecking raw!
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