ติดตั้ง Steam
เข้าสู่ระบบ
|
ภาษา
简体中文 (จีนตัวย่อ)
繁體中文 (จีนตัวเต็ม)
日本語 (ญี่ปุ่น)
한국어 (เกาหลี)
български (บัลแกเรีย)
Čeština (เช็ก)
Dansk (เดนมาร์ก)
Deutsch (เยอรมัน)
English (อังกฤษ)
Español - España (สเปน)
Español - Latinoamérica (สเปน - ลาตินอเมริกา)
Ελληνικά (กรีก)
Français (ฝรั่งเศส)
Italiano (อิตาลี)
Bahasa Indonesia (อินโดนีเซีย)
Magyar (ฮังการี)
Nederlands (ดัตช์)
Norsk (นอร์เวย์)
Polski (โปแลนด์)
Português (โปรตุเกส - โปรตุเกส)
Português - Brasil (โปรตุเกส - บราซิล)
Română (โรมาเนีย)
Русский (รัสเซีย)
Suomi (ฟินแลนด์)
Svenska (สวีเดน)
Türkçe (ตุรกี)
Tiếng Việt (เวียดนาม)
Українська (ยูเครน)
รายงานปัญหาเกี่ยวกับการแปลภาษา
The root problem here is that when you tell Steam to launch a non-steam program and then set the icon to something different, it creates that shortcut arrow by default.
There are three solutions that I found:
1) Use "Vista Shortcut Overlay Remover": Google, download and install this program. Run it and select "No arrow", then "Apply" and restart your computer. If you're lucky like me and the original poster of this idea ((SAS)U ID10T), then all those annoying shortcut arrows in Steam (as well as those for shortcut arrows over your entire OS) will disappear, and you will rejoice. Steam uses system resources / references to create its arrow icon, hence why (the right) registry hacks can work. This may not work on Windows 8, I wouldn't know.
2) Inject an icon into your launch program: For this you will need to download and install "Resource Hacker" (http://www.angusj.com/resourcehacker/). You begin by resetting the launch properties of the non-steam game (or just re-adding it), and then (first, make a back-up copy of it in case this breaks something in your game) right-click on it in Windows Explorer and select "Open Using Resource Hacker". Then under Action -> Replace Icon. You'll need to locate the .EXE or .ICO you want to use (see below if you need to extract .ICOs from other files), then save and overwrite the original file. This should remove the annoying arrow, since we're not telling Steam to use a separate icon entity -- the program itself has the icon we want.
3) Extract or use icon picture files: You can use a program like "ByCyIconGrabber" to extract the icon files and save them as .PNG's, then link them as an icon file/image in Steam. The downside of this is that is in the "Detail View" layout of Steam, the icon appears tiny in the detail screen, where it should be larger. But there is no annoying arrow.