https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=503523
renne...@protonmail.com changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- CC| |renne...@protonmail.com --- Comment #2 from renne...@protonmail.com --- (In reply to Martin Senftleben from comment #0) > In the settings on the first page (section "user interface" (German: > "Benutzeroberfläche"), tab "folders and subwindows" (German: "Ordner & > Unterfenster")), the first setting relates to the behaviour of dolphin at > startup ("Beim Start anzeigen", "show at startup"). In German, the first > option says: "Ordner, Unterfenster und Fensterzustand vom letzten Start", > which means "folders, subwindows and window status from last start". In > other words: Dolphin starts as it has started the last time. But I am sure > that is not what is intended, because then Dolphin would always start with > only one window, no tab, showing the home folder (that is how it started the > very first time, and every time after that, as long as this setting is > enabled - and doing what is said there in the German translation). However, > I am sure this option is there in order to retain open tabs and folders as > they were when dolphin was running last before it was closed. In German, it > would then be correct to say "letzten Zustand wieder herstellen" or similar, > in English it would probably be somthing like "restore last status". I am > pretty sure that it was like that in previous versions, and the current > misguiding translation has come up only recently, but I may be wrong with > that. > > Since this is not a technical, but a translation issue, I don't post > technical information here (like system, OS version etc.) Thanks for pointing this out! Would you be satisfied with this solution then? "Show on startup:" "Folders, tabs, and window state from last time" „Beim Start anzeigen:“ „Ordner, Unterfenster und Fensterzustand vom letzten Mal“ https://imgur.com/a/jaD6xGx -- You are receiving this mail because: You are watching all bug changes.