Using gnome-open to open pdf files
Removing exo-utils
worked for me perfectly.
Forth Approach
I could reproduce your problem by deleting this file /usr/share/applications/evince.desktop
, so make sure you have this file.
Reference.
Third Approach
xdg-open appears to use the configuration of /etc/mailcap
. So edit it to associate pdf with evince.
gksu gedit /etc/mailcap
Look for the lines that begin with application/pdf
; application/x-pdf
; application/x-bzpdf
; application/x-gzpdf
. They should look like this to associate pdf with evince:
application/pdf; evince '%s'; test=test -n "$DISPLAY"; nametemplate=%s.pdf
application/x-pdf; evince '%s'; test=test -n "$DISPLAY"; nametemplate=%s.pdf
application/x-bzpdf; evince '%s'; test=test -n "$DISPLAY"; nametemplate=%s.pdf.bz2
application/x-gzpdf; evince '%s'; test=test -n "$DISPLAY"; nametemplate=%s.pdf.gz
Reference.
Second Approach
What is the output of
xdg-mime query filetype foo.pdf
If the output isn't what we should expect, then:
xdg-mime default evince.desktop application/pdf
Reference.
First Approach
There are other places that the file associations are set.
You may change the files associations at:
/usr/share/applications/defaults.list
/usr/share/applications/mimeinfo.cache
~/.local/share/applications/
~/.gnome/share/apps/
Look for "pdf" and for "Nautilus" inside theses files.
I just ran into this problem today, and according to this thread on ubuntuforums.org, it's caused by exo-utils:
http://ubuntuforums.org/showthread.php?t=1729680
exo-tools is a dependency of Thunar (which I installed today), but isn't normally installed in stock Ubuntu, which I guess is why they missed this bug in release.
Removing this packaged (I actually just removed Thunar and all it's deps) fixed the problem for me.