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I have a problem with missing icons - I first noticed they disappeared after one of the recent upgrades to Loki.

I have Calendar, Camera, KsystemLog, Screenshot, Videos, Photos and Mail icons missing in Applications. There is a growing sense this list varies but I can't be sure...

They are all fine in plank (though Mail and Calendar seem to share the same icon)

There are also icons missing in System Settings:

Applications, Device Colour Profile, Power, Sound, Online Accounts, Date & time, Parental Control

The missing icons appear as a grey box with bottom left turn up.

I have tried "restore default settings" as suggested in a similar question with no difference.

What can I do to resolve this?

Thanks

3 Answers 3

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I had the same problem. I fixed it by doing the command:

sudo apt-get install elementary-desktop

You should get the icons back, but if you were using something like nautilus file manager, then you will have 2 different "files" folders show up in your applications menu.

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  • The name you see in the Applications menu is the one set by the line Name= from the corresponding .desktop file in /usr/share/applications/.- As different file managers like Pantheon-Files, Nemo and Nautilus use the line Name=Files, having them all installed will show the same name for all. - To change that for Nautilus: sudo gedit /usr/share/applications/nautilus.desktop, and change that line to something like Name=Nautilus File Manager.
    – user170
    Feb 13, 2017 at 9:19
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I had the same problem and elementary-desktop was already installed and updated. So, i fixed it by getting elementary+ via external repository, this way:

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:cybre/elementaryplus
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install elementaryplus

After that, I launched the application "elementary+ Configurator" and switched on the core-icon theme. Must be an easier way to do that but I just couldn't find it. Hope it works for someone.

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You can also manage your Application menu with menulibre.

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:menulibre-dev/daily

sudo apt-get update

sudo apt-get install menulibre

Then you can execute menulibre in terminal and you’ll get simple GUI to manage you Application menu. Probably that’s more convenient - you can remove apps that you don’t use really and add new apps that didn’t automatically installed desktop entry.

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