• RoboRay
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      10 months ago

      Copy the file and paste it into anywhere you can enter text… you get the path to the file as text.

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Yay, basic features needing weird workarounds!

        Edit: it seems like it, but we were wrong. You dont need a filepath, you can literally copy the file and paste it to a

        • Browser
        • Terminal
        • Editor

        Can someone give me a situation where you cant paste a file and it inserts the filepath instead?

        • @warmaster
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          310 months ago

          I’m on KDE, how does KDE do it better?

          • RachelRodent
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            610 months ago

            On dolphin, you right click on it and than there is “copy path to file” button

            • @warmaster
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              310 months ago

              How is it better if you are going to paste it anyway? I mean, on GNOME you would have to just copy the file, instead of the two clicks on KDE.

              Am I missing something?

              • @[email protected]
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                410 months ago

                This works in Dolphin/KDE too, actually same workflow as on Windows. I just find it very strange to do that, but as you are saying that, I suppose as on Unix everything is a file, copying a file to a location that cant handle the file is just like copying the filepath!

                Boom, blew my silly KDE mind. I think you are right, in most situations you can just copy-paste the actual file, as you only need file paths where the file cannot be pasted anyways.

                • Fushuan [he/him]
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                  10 months ago

                  This might work sometimes, but some other times you are dealing with a program that deals in files and text and you want the path itself, for example, to send the path of a file in a shared mounted disk to a colleague/friend through slack /discord/telegram/teams. All of those will try to send the file itself instead of the path I would want to send.

                  Furthermore, idk how that interacts within a VM environment, for example when you have a work computer and you need to connect into a gnome based remote desktop environment, will the shared clipboard act nicely? That’s way too many variables and prone to errors, an option to copy path is just simpler.

              • Fushuan [he/him]
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                110 months ago

                If for some reason you paste a file in telegram/slack/discord/teams, it tries to send the file, so I have no way of sending the path to the file (which might be on a shared device) to someone unless I paste it in a text editor first and then copy the text.

                • @warmaster
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                  110 months ago

                  That’s a very logical use case. Are there any keyboard modifiers you could use? Maybe pasting with CTRL+SHIFT+V for example?

    • @sv1sjp
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      1510 months ago

      ++ as well as searching on a folder simply by the first letter, without searching everywhere

      • @[email protected]
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        1310 months ago

        They intentionally removed this feature years ago. It was possible to reenable via a dconf setting for a while but I believe that was also eventually removed.
        So annoying.

        • @[email protected]
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          710 months ago

          It’s absolutely insanity that this feature was removed. I stopped using Nautilus because of this.

          • @[email protected]
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            10 months ago

            Agree. I can understand GNOME not supporting infinite settings and customization, but since when are Linux users noobs?

            People using GNOME either never edited a Desktop entry, entered a manual path or did anything poweruser related, or they use 3rd party apps or do everything in the terminal.

            I dont get how a Linux Desktop can have so little support for anything.

            Needing extensions to restore basic features is not good UX. Like a clipboard manager, blurry shell, appindicators? Why?

            • Fushuan [he/him]
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              210 months ago

              The only reason I use gnome is because the window dragging has a weird flicker with KDE and nvidia cards. In gnome it’s way smoother. That and the pressing the super button for the fancy window animation, that one is really nice. I could live without the fancy animation (or with whatever KDE replacement that I’m sure it’s good enough) if the driver issue wasn’t a thing, though.

              • @[email protected]
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                210 months ago

                Yes KDE has something similar and you can remap it with a command. TheLinuxExperiment had this for krunner once, its probably possible.

                GNOME is really nice in what it does. Simply that it doesnt do enough for me. There are cool extensions and I feel the community is just way bigger. The animations, dash to panel, blur my shell, make it very cool.

                Just the lack of so much like powerful apps is a nogo

      • wvstolzing
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        10 months ago

        Putting the following with executable permissions inside ~/.local/share/nautilus/scripts/SCRIPTNAME adds a right click menu to Nautilus that serves the same purpose:

        #!/bin/bash
        
        CLIPBD=''
        [[ "${XDG_SESSION_TYPE}" == "x11" ]] && CLIPBD='xsel -ib'
        [[ "${XDG_SESSION_TYPE}" == "wayland" ]] && CLIPBD='wl-copy --trim-newline' && wl-copy --clear
        
        echo -n "${NAUTILUS_SCRIPT_SELECTED_FILE_PATHS}" \
          | tee >(xargs -I {} notify-send "Path Copied:" "{}") \
          | ${CLIPBD}
        

        The ‘notify-send’ bit isn’t necessary; it just puts up a notification.

        Mentioning only because it’s a simple demonstration of a pretty easy way to extend Nautilus for all kinds of purposes; w/o messing around with the pygobject interface. (There’s supposed to be an xdg standard for file manager extensions like this, but managers use their own custom folders, syntax, etc. for such extensions. I think pcmanfm adheres to the standard; Dolphin requires a .desktop file somewhere; Thunar, Caja, & Nemo work similar to Nautilus.)

      • @[email protected]
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        10 months ago

        Yes, Gnome is context aware if you ctrl+c a an image file, and you paste it to a text editor it will paste it as a path, if you paste it in an image editor it will be pasted as an image, if the program supports it (e.g. it works in Krita, but not in Pinta)

        Drag and drop is not working because of Wayland. Between 2 windows of the same app, e.g. Nautilus it’s working.

        • Fushuan [he/him]
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          110 months ago

          Cool, it pastes it as an image in telegram, I would need to use a text editor as a proxy. Gnome is not context aware enough to read my brain to know the intent, having the choice to be explicit (copy path) is just better.

    • @[email protected]
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      410 months ago

      Luckily if you need that feature, you can just download a different file manager. This is why I hate monopolies and love Linux and the FOSS community.

        • @[email protected]
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          110 months ago

          It’s not just file managers that enjoy monopolies though. Often there is an industry standard software that people are essentially locked into, like Adobe. It seems like they’re pushing unwanted features lately, but people have to just suck it up.