Hi, after using KDE for many years now, I've defected to Gnome with Ubuntu's Dapper Drake. After using it for a few days I really like it and I'm getting along great. I had tried to use it a few times previous but always gave up and went back to KDE.
Everything I use and need is available in Gnome, except one thing. In KDE I always used Konqueror for navigating around my folders and when needing to revert to the command line simply clicked on the Konsole button in Konqueror (which I placed on the toolbar) and a terminal popped open in my current working directory. I can't seem to do this in Gnome/Nautilus. I have to open Gnome Terminal separately and cd into the directory that I want. It's only a minor niggle, but I've just seemed to have fallen into working this way. I do remember, I think it was Mandrake 8.2, that Nautilus did used to have a function like the one described above.
Does anyone know if this is possible in the latest Gnome/Nautilus?
Thanks all.
Martin
On Mon, Aug 21, 2006 at 09:02:56PM +0100, Martin Collins wrote:
Does anyone know if this is possible in the latest Gnome/Nautilus?
Check out http://g-scripts.sourceforge.net/cat-executing.php there are some scripts there that will do what you want. They go into the directory $HOME/.gnome2/nautilus-scripts (allegedly, not tested this, let us know how you get on).
Thanks Adam
On Mon, 2006-08-21 at 21:26 +0100, Adam Bower wrote:
Check out http://g-scripts.sourceforge.net/cat-executing.php there are
Thanks Adam. I used the gnome2-terminal-here by Chris Picton and it worked first time. I just navigate to my chosen location, then just select file->scripts->openterminal.sh from within Nautilus and bingo - just what I wanted.
Thanks Adam.
Regards,
Martin