I keep losing my application icons in OS X.
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I keep losing my application icons in OS X. Is there a way in OS X to "rebuild the desktop" like you did in OS 9? Several of my applications (iTunes and After Effects for examle) won't keep their custom icons - even if I reinstall the program. It's also causing other problems as well. Safari insists that I don't have iTunes installed, so I can't follow links to the music store for instance.
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Answer:
What you want is to delete the icon cache files and let the Finder rebuild them. Simplest way is http://www.northernsoftworks.com/tigercachecleaner.html. Also make sure your disk's directories are in good working order; if you have DiskWarrior I'd recommend booting from its CD and warrying your disk now.
ssmith at Ask.Metafilter.Com Visit the source
Other answers
ssmith, I'm not sure I understand your question. I've never used OS 9, so I don't know what context you're speaking in when you say 'custom icons'. There is no such thing as rebuild the desktop. There is http://kb.iu.edu/data/aoxn.html, which you might want to try. If you haven't installed new software recently and Repair Permissions fixed your problem, this may be a sign of a hard drive about to die, I suggest backing up all critical data before you start. Also, http://www.rubicode.com/Software/RCDefaultApp/ can fix your last problem if everything else is working.
onalark
I should clarify that when I say "losing icons" I mean that the application uses the default application of a couple sheets of paper with an A made out of a pencil, ruler and (i guess) a pen. In OS 9 there was a database of all your applications. You could reset this database with a keyboard command at start up. Because the database was accessed frequently it would sometimes get corrupted, so that's why it was an easy process to rebuild it. I have repaired the permissions, and this machine is only a month and a half or so old so I'm really hopiing it's not a bad drive. RCDefaultApp looks great though. Thank you very much for linking that.
ssmith
Try http://www.askdavetaylor.com/can_i_check_my_plist_files_in_mac_os_x_for_problems.html. I hope you're comfortable with using the Terminal :). You could also manually delete the plist files for specific applications that have problems. In either case, if you delete a plist file, restarting the program will rebuild the plist file, but all of your stored preferences/passwords will be wiped. I've done this to myself once before, I can't remember how (perhaps a Force Quit at a bad time). Wiping the plist file fixed the application. I don't remember application icons ever disappearing though.
onalark
Oh, and check Console for any weird error messages that might be related if you're still having problems and copy them here. Console is located in Applications/Utilities.
onalark
Thank you for the help onalark and kindall, I really appreciate it. The Tiger Cache Cleaner did the trick.
ssmith
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