On Thu, 31 May 2018 10:42:17 +1200 Richard Hector sent:
> On 30/05/18 11:12, Charlie S wrote:
> > On Tue, 29 May 2018 14:22:08 + (UTC) Curt sent:
> >
> >> On 2018-05-29, Charlie S wrote:
> >>>
> >>> I wonder how one discovers what file m
On 30/05/18 11:12, Charlie S wrote:
> On Tue, 29 May 2018 14:22:08 + (UTC) Curt sent:
>
>> On 2018-05-29, Charlie S wrote:
>>>
>>> I wonder how one discovers what file managers there are installed on
>>> this system. I suppose have to name each one a
On 30/05/18 11:49, Charlie S wrote:
My file manager window was too small, the spin control hidden.
Ah! Thanks for letting us know.
At the same time there is a wallaby hopping round the room and wombats
running all over the floor. So when unplugging, plugging in leads on
shelves have to negoti
On Wed, 30 May 2018 07:14:45 +1200 Ben Caradoc-Davies sent:
> On 29/05/18 13:46, Charlie S wrote:
> > On Tue, 29 May 2018 13:26:37 +1200 Ben Caradoc-Davies sent:
> >> On 29/05/18 13:08, Charlie S wrote:
> >>> Hello Everyone,
> >>> Suddenly my fil
On Tue, 29 May 2018 18:50:40 +0200 Stefan Krusche sent:
> On my system here is also a configuration option in the opening
> dialog of kate next to the field where the directory is shown. There,
> in a submenu, I can choose that directories be shown first. Also,
> with F12 as a hotkey, directories
> arrow appears and can be reversed.
>
> AIUI you're at the mercy of the toolkit for much of the look-and-feel
> of what is contained within the windows that different window managers
> and applications display.
>
> > I have tried aptitude search file-manager and apt
On Tue, 29 May 2018 14:22:08 + (UTC) Curt sent:
> On 2018-05-29, Charlie S wrote:
> >
> > I wonder how one discovers what file managers there are installed on
> > this system. I suppose have to name each one and see which are
> > installed that way.
>
&
c/bav2blkq3/kate.jpg
> If you have something different, then the reason for that is beyond
> me. But as far as I'm aware of, it has nothing to do with file
> managers.
>
Thank you Siard.
You are right. I should have sent you a screenshot, and did almost. You
would have picked up th
On 29/05/18 13:46, Charlie S wrote:
On Tue, 29 May 2018 13:26:37 +1200 Ben Caradoc-Davies sent:
On 29/05/18 13:08, Charlie S wrote:
Hello Everyone,
Suddenly my file managers show the files in reverse order to
the norm, i.e directories on top and individual files
beneath. Don
; filemanager and apt policy filemanager and many others ways including
> which filemanager and all different ways of speling.
>
> But I can't find what file managers are installed to see which one
> might be being used and need configuring. All those requests come up
> empty.
>
manager and apt policy filemanager and many others ways including
> which filemanager and all different ways of speling.
>
> But I can't find what file managers are installed to see which one
> might be being used and need configuring. All those requests come up
> empty.
>
&g
On 2018-05-29, Charlie S wrote:
>
> I wonder how one discovers what file managers there are installed on
> this system. I suppose have to name each one and see which are installed
> that way.
xdg-mime query default inode/directory
works here (xdg-mime is part of xdg-utils) to
as I'm aware of, it has nothing to do with file managers.
that
will change the order of the directories and files.
I have no idea what file manager they use.
I have tried aptitude search file-manager and aptitude search
filemanager and apt policy filemanager and many others ways including
which filemanager and all different ways of speling.
But I can't
Charlie S wrote:
> But when I go Ctrl-O when in Kate or Lyx the order is reversed.
I tried Kate. To reverse the order, click the 'Name' header.
Note the small black triangle at the right side of the header
pointing up or down.
On Tue, 29 May 2018 13:26:37 +1200 Ben Caradoc-Davies sent:
> On 29/05/18 13:08, Charlie S wrote:
> > Hello Everyone,
> > Suddenly my file managers show the files in reverse order to
> > the norm, i.e directories on top and individual files
> > beneath. Don
On 29/05/18 13:08, Charlie S wrote:
Hello Everyone,
Suddenly my file managers show the files in reverse order to
the norm, i.e directories on top and individual files beneath.
Don't know how it was accidentally done?
Using FVWM - Debian Stretch
Any clues where I might conf
Hello Everyone,
Suddenly my file managers show the files in reverse order to
the norm, i.e directories on top and individual files beneath.
Don't know how it was accidentally done?
Using FVWM - Debian Stretch
Any clues where I might configure this to return it to what i
On 08/01/18 02:28, Carl Fink wrote:
On 01/06/2018 03:06 PM, Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
What kernel version? Do the entries disappear on reboot?
This morning I had time to reboot, and I can now confirm that
rebooting cleared the dead entries. It sure looks like the
already-reported bug.
Thanks fo
On 01/06/2018 03:06 PM, Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
What kernel version? Do the entries disappear on reboot?
This morning I had time to reboot, and I can now confirm that
rebooting cleared the dead entries. It sure looks like the
already-reported bug.
Thanks for the pointer--it never occurred to
On 01/06/2018 03:06 PM, Ben Caradoc-Davies wrote:
On 07/01/18 03:54, Carl Fink wrote:
I have a couple of Android devices that mount using MTP. Recently I was
trying to install LineageOS on one (which failed because the USB port on
the phone physically failed halfway through, but that's a side-is
On 07/01/18 03:54, Carl Fink wrote:
I have a couple of Android devices that mount using MTP. Recently I was
trying to install LineageOS on one (which failed because the USB port on
the phone physically failed halfway through, but that's a side-issue).
As a result, apparently, both caja and thunar
o-mtpfs
> jmtpfs
> mtp-tools
>
> How can I clean this up?
Hi, Carl.. I'm just here to commiserate. I don't have an answer. My
experience has been that this ebbs and flows with Debian development
progress, particularly since you mentioned using Debian Testing.
Mine wil
I'm sure this is a known problem but I can't figure out what the
correct search terms would be.
I have a couple of Android devices that mount using MTP. Recently I was
trying to install LineageOS on one (which failed because the USB port on
the phone physically failed halfway through, but that's
2009/12/8 Camaleón :
> On Tue, 08 Dec 2009 11:01:40 +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:
>
>> Are there any KDE file managers, or other file managers that support
>> SFTP and work decently in a KDE environment, that do not suffer from
>> this bug:
>> https://bugs.kde.org/show_
On Tue, 08 Dec 2009 11:01:40 +0200, Dotan Cohen wrote:
> Are there any KDE file managers, or other file managers that support
> SFTP and work decently in a KDE environment, that do not suffer from
> this bug:
> https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55804
>
> The bug is that D
On Tue, 8 Dec 2009 11:01:40 +0200
Dotan Cohen wrote:
> Are there any KDE file managers, or other file managers that support
> SFTP and work decently in a KDE environment, that do not suffer from
> this bug:
> https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55804
>
> The bug is that D
Are there any KDE file managers, or other file managers that support
SFTP and work decently in a KDE environment, that do not suffer from
this bug:
https://bugs.kde.org/show_bug.cgi?id=55804
The bug is that Dolphin / Konqueror incorrectly change the timestamp
of files copied and moved. This is
Sam, Mon, Mar 04, 2002 at 02:13:47AM -0800:
> Hi,
> I saw the screenshot that you mentioned. It's really nice. Can you tell
> me how you get borderless windows in gnome? Also, which mail client do
> you use and how do you get those colors in vi/vim while writing mail?
> Also please point me to som
Timothy R. Butler, Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 09:32:37PM -0600:
> Oops, sorry - here we go:
> http://www.uninetsolutions.com/tbutler/linux/ss-1.html .
>
doeslook nice
> > Is there any way in KDE to do a borderless window? The last time I
> > tried I couldn't figure out how to do it. I like to pu
Hi Angus,
> I'm getting a 404 from your link.
Oops, sorry - here we go:
http://www.uninetsolutions.com/tbutler/linux/ss-1.html .
> Is there any way in KDE to do a borderless window? The last time I
> tried I couldn't figure out how to do it. I like to put borderless
> windows at a few points
Timothy R. Butler, Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 06:27:20PM -0600:
> > Thanks for the suggestion, though. Maybe it's time to try KDE again.
>
> You might find it worth while. Really, you could make it look virtually
> like unthemed Gnome using the QT-Motif widget style (or most other GTK-looks,
> KDE
Howdy,
> I tried KDE about six months ago and I went back to gnome because I like
> the ability to configure everything to the pixel (enlightenment) and I
> couldn't get KDE to display icons (some pixmap problem).
Hrm... that's odd.
> Thanks for the suggestion, though. Maybe it's time to try
Timothy R. Butler, Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 01:23:39PM -0600:
>
> I'm not sure if you are looking for other options, but if you are have you
> taken a look at Konqueror? It can handle mounting by itself, can follow
> symlinks, has an easy-to-use mime-type editor, provides most of the bells and
Timo Benk, Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 07:23:11PM +0100:
>
> My solution in using Mime types with mc is the following
> section in /etc/mc.ext:
>
> --
> ### Default ###
>
>
On Sunday 03 March 2002 11:56 am, Angus D Madden wrote:
> I need to find a good graphical file manager for my family pc. I am
> aware of two choices: gmc and nautilus.
I'm not sure if you are looking for other options, but if you are have you
taken a look at Konqueror? It can handle mounting
On Sun, Mar 03, 2002 at 12:56:04PM -0500, Angus D Madden wrote:
> I need to find a good graphical file manager for my family pc. I am
> aware of two choices: gmc and nautilus.
>
> Right now they are using gmc. I like it because it is simple and
> straightforward. The only problem is that I have
I need to find a good graphical file manager for my family pc. I am
aware of two choices: gmc and nautilus.
Right now they are using gmc. I like it because it is simple and
straightforward. The only problem is that I have not been able to
associate mime-types with applications. Say, for exampl
> From: Alexander Gretencord [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Subject: Re: are there other file managers besides gmc?
>
> Andzo wrote:
> >
> > > FileRunner is very good.
> > > http://www.cd.chalmers.se/~hch/filerunner.html
>
> Can you navigate File
Alexander Gretencord wrote:
> Andzo wrote:
> >
> > > FileRunner is very good.
> > > http://www.cd.chalmers.se/~hch/filerunner.html
>
> Can you navigate FileRunner through the keyboard ? I hate those
> filemanagers where you need a mouse for every single command. I use the
> commandline and mc now
Andzo wrote:
>
> > FileRunner is very good.
> > http://www.cd.chalmers.se/~hch/filerunner.html
Can you navigate FileRunner through the keyboard ? I hate those
filemanagers where you need a mouse for every single command. I use the
commandline and mc now obut I'd like to have somethin like the win
> john smith wrote:
> >
> > hello,
> >
> > I would like to know what other file managers are available besides
> > gmc..maybe there is something better out there?
>
> FileRunner is very good.
http://www.cd.chalmers.se/~hch/filerunner.html
> --
Christian Surchi wrote:
> On Sun, Apr 02, 2000 at 04:39:05AM +, John Carline wrote:
> > Personally I like fvwm95. It's very configurable and on my box uses less
> > memory than
> > any other. But since we each our own style, go to the following link and
> > pick one
> > you like.
> >
> > ww
ty of packages available. A
really nice program can in there hiding, like filerunner for me, and we
never realize it until we stumble across it, or someone else mentions
it.
Tom
john smith wrote:
>
> hello,
>
> I would like to know what other file managers are available besides
>
On Sun, Apr 02, 2000 at 04:39:05AM +, John Carline wrote:
> Personally I like fvwm95. It's very configurable and on my box uses less
> memory than
> any other. But since we each our own style, go to the following link and
> pick one
> you like.
>
> www.PLIG.org/xwinman
He asked a file mana
john smith wrote:
> hello,
>
> I would like to know what other file managers are available besides
> gmc..maybe there is something better out there?
>
Personally I like fvwm95. It's very configurable and on my box uses less memory
than
any other. But since we each our
john smith wrote:
>
> hello,
>
> I would like to know what other file managers are available besides
> gmc..maybe there is something better out there?
I like gentoo.
Sean
On Sun, Apr 02, 2000 at 12:49:53AM +, john smith wrote:
> hello,
>
> I would like to know what other file managers are available besides
> gmc..maybe there is something better out there?
My personal preference is the file manager that comes with tkdesk. It's
not GNOME
hello,
I would like to know what other file managers are available besides
gmc..maybe there is something better out there?
__
Get Your Private, Free Email at http://www.hotmail.com
"tkdesk does not conform to X11 ... and cannot be restored at the next
session"
What does it mean ??
It conforms just fine to X11, it doesn't employ KDE's session management.
That's all it's saying -- a harmless message (and plug for you to switch
to KDE apps, of course).
==
>
>So, anyone wanna chime in with why they like their favorite file managers
>(under X)? I'm on the lookout for the cream of the crop. I hate to say it,
>but the Winblows team has a good file manager, and I'd like similar
I like the filemanager in TkDesk.
paul
On mar, 12 jan 1999, Tom Pfeifer wrote:
>I don't know if you've tried these or not, but the two I like are
>Midnight Commander (mc) and tkdesk.
>
>Midnight Commander (found in utils directory) runs in console mode or an
>xterm window, and tkdesk (found in x11 directory) is strictly an X
>program.
e:
>
> So, anyone wanna chime in with why they like their favorite file managers
> (under X)? I'm on the lookout for the cream of the crop. I hate to say it,
> but the Winblows team has a good file manager, and I'd like similar
> functionality under X. The one I got with
In a message dated 1/11/99 7:06:12 PM Central Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED]
net.com writes:
> BTW, the Linux Explorer has been renamed to X-Plorer (Other than linux
> support) and hasn't been updated in quite a long time, especially for
> a linux thingie. But it's a good way to ease the win
> Jay,
> If you like Windoze Explorer, try Linux Explorer (explorer).
> They look very much alike! :-)
BTW, the Linux Explorer has been renamed to X-Plorer (Other than linux
support) and hasn't been updated in quite a long time, especially for
a linux thingie. But it's a good way t
Jay,
If you like Windoze Explorer, try Linux Explorer (explorer).
They look very much alike! :-)
On 11 Jan, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> So, anyone wanna chime in with why they like their favorite file managers
> (under X)? I'm on the lookout for the cream of the cr
So, anyone wanna chime in with why they like their favorite file managers
(under X)? I'm on the lookout for the cream of the crop. I hate to say it,
but the Winblows team has a good file manager, and I'd like similar
functionality under X. The one I got with KDE is okay, but I detes
Michael Beattie wrote:
>
> On Mon, 13 Jul 1998, Alexey Vyskubov wrote:
>
> > On Thu, Jul 09, 1998 at 02:38:00PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > > Tkdesk looks fine but I don't know how to get rid off of the icons menu
> > > which
> > > appear on the left of the screen.
> > >
> >
> > Nasty ha
On Mon, 13 Jul 1998, Alexey Vyskubov wrote:
> On Thu, Jul 09, 1998 at 02:38:00PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > Tkdesk looks fine but I don't know how to get rid off of the icons menu
> > which
> > appear on the left of the screen.
> >
>
> Nasty hack:
> put the following in the last line
On Thu, Jul 09, 1998 at 02:38:00PM +0200, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> Tkdesk looks fine but I don't know how to get rid off of the icons menu which
> appear on the left of the screen.
>
Nasty hack:
put the following in the last line of ~/.tkdesk/AppBar:
set tkdesk(appbar) {{}}
;)
--
Alexey Vy
On Thu, 9 Jul 1998, Tom Pfeifer wrote:
> I tried explorer. It runs OK, but you can't do a whole lot with it yet.
> Looks promising though.
>
> For now, the best two I've used are Midnight Commander and the TkDesk.
>
[snip]
add to that kfm from KDE... :)
Michael Beattie
Hi people.
I was the one, who ask about a file managers. I read about the
XVFilemanager. What about it. Is it a good one. (It looks nice). My
problem is that i cant compile it, but thats another story.
Thanks, Phillip , [EMAIL PROTECTED
> Hi
>
>Im wonder the power of my linux system. But Im still browsing my
> computer only with the "ls" command. Can you people recomend me a good
> file manager ???
No one mentioned offix-files. Why ? (I don't use it myself. I am just
cuorious.)
offix-files - Drag & Drop based filema
Try the midnight commander I think the current version is mc-4.0.5.tar.gz
or more
> Hi
>
>Im wonder the power of my linux system. But Im still browsing my
> computer only with the "ls" command. Can you people recomend me a good
> file manager ???
>
>
>
>
>
> Thanks, Phillip Neuman
Tkdesk looks fine but I don't know how to get rid off of the icons menu which
appear on the left of the screen.
--
>I tried explorer. It runs OK, but you can't do a whole lot with it yet.
>Looks promising though.
>
>For now, the best two I've used are Midnight Commander and the TkDesk.
>
>
I tried explorer. It runs OK, but you can't do a whole lot with it yet.
Looks promising though.
For now, the best two I've used are Midnight Commander and the TkDesk.
Tom
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> You have got one with staroffice 4.0 (www.stardivision.com)
> Another package is explorer (a wi
You have got one with staroffice 4.0 (www.stardivision.com)
Another package is explorer (a win95 like). I didn't not tried it. I
think it is in
the contrib directory
Franck
>Hi
>
> Im wonder the power of my linux system. But Im still browsing my
>computer only with the "ls" command. Can you
On Wed, 08 Jul 1998 22:41:23 PDT, phillip Neumann wrote:
> Im wonder the power of my linux system. But Im still browsing my
>computer only with the "ls" command. Can you people recomend me a good
>file manager ???
Well, if you're used to Norton Commander from DOS there is Midnight
Comman
Hi
Im wonder the power of my linux system. But Im still browsing my
computer only with the "ls" command. Can you people recomend me a good
file manager ???
Thanks, Phillip Neumann
--> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
69 matches
Mail list logo