Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

GNOME Console Could Be Ubuntu 22.10's GNOME Terminal Replacement

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • oleid
    replied
    Originally posted by uxmkt View Post
    Naturally - the pros have all wandered off (about the time gnome3 landed)
    Why did they wander off?

    Anyway, you missed the point. The point is you should rarely need the terminal, unless you want to use it.
    The only case $AverageUser needs a terminal is when they copy&paste random stuff from some blog.

    Leave a comment:


  • RahulSundaram
    replied
    Originally posted by Kayden View Post
    Fedora has had patched versions of vte3 and GNOME Terminal that provide notifications and real transparency for quite some time now. On Archlinux, you can get gnome-terminal-fedora and vte3-notification from the AUR. They're both really nice, honestly I'm not sure why they've been maintained separately from upstream for so long...
    Upstream GNOME Terminal maintainer didn't want it IIRC. Otherwise, in general, Fedora has explicit guidance encouraging sending patches upstream (I wrote it more than a decade back)

    Leave a comment:


  • kpedersen
    replied
    Originally posted by EvilHowl View Post
    I have just installed it from the latest git sources and it is SO pretty and modern compared to the old GNOME Terminal. Can't wait to replace it when it's stable.
    Amazing how something that is effectively emulating ancient typewriters can be so "modern".

    Leave a comment:


  • Kayden
    replied
    Fedora has had patched versions of vte3 and GNOME Terminal that provide notifications and real transparency for quite some time now. On Archlinux, you can get gnome-terminal-fedora and vte3-notification from the AUR. They're both really nice, honestly I'm not sure why they've been maintained separately from upstream for so long...

    Leave a comment:


  • Vistaus
    replied
    Originally posted by sinepgib View Post

    I think it's meant to deal with the fact pretty much all tutorials out there to do stuff focus on the terminal, so a casual user would be "I just want to run this command because <blogger I for some reason trust> told me so". Much like most people only use nano if they are not vim/emacs users and their GUI borked, so they follow some guide to fix it in single user mode. nano is simple almost to the point of the absurd (by default, a friend of mine did mod it to a point it was somewhat useful for programming) so casual users that only want it for emergencies don't need to go through a steep learning curve.
    You don't have to tell *me* about Nano. I've been using Linux for years and am quite experienced with the terminal, but I use Nano all the time. Actually, not all the time anymore since I discovered Micro earlier this year, which is even more straightforward to use, but I do still love and sometimes use Nano as well.

    Leave a comment:


  • Snaipersky
    replied
    To those wondering about transparency, lots of programs "require" a certain terminal size, but don't necessarily use a rectangle. I can have something under it giving me other useful info, or if I'm following a guide, I can keep it under the terminal as I work.

    Leave a comment:


  • uxmkt
    replied
    Originally posted by reba View Post
    It's just average and for the average user - so make it default! Gnome logic. So Gnome users are average users?
    Naturally - the pros have all wandered off (about the time gnome3 landed) to something else because of the CADT development model (mentioned earlier here).

    Leave a comment:


  • oleid
    replied
    Originally posted by reba View Post
    It's just average and for the average user - so make it default! Gnome logic. So Gnome users are average users?
    Yes, some of my > 70 years old family members use GNOME on their computer.
    They only need the terminal once in a while if I tell them via phone to launch a script.

    A minimal console which is available by default is good enough for most cases. Elite users should have enough knowledge to install their favorite terminal.

    Leave a comment:


  • RahulSundaram
    replied
    Originally posted by reba View Post

    Funny to see Fedora guys a bit stumped of how feature-lacking the replacing program Console to Terminal is that suddenly gets shoved down their throats by Gnome upstream.
    Upstream can only provide default recommendations. They can't force distributions to do anything at all here. If the features don't fit the requirements as Fedora workstation developers see it, they can still stick to GNOME terminal (with their custom patches) just fine or patch Console (which in theory might be easier because it's a newer better maintained codebase) and send those patches upstream if the maintainer is open to it.

    Leave a comment:


  • direc85
    replied
    I tried gnome-console and boy is it light and sleek! I still want at least colors to be configurable, so that's a no-go for me. There's zero configurability whatsoever..!

    I had a look at the repo and found out about Tilix - just what I need!

    About the user-friendliness: how is "open terminal and be presented a shell prompt" friendlier with Console than Terminal? Just where the user friendliness arise from? Can someone enlighten me?

    Edit: I do love the idea of having a (modern) lightweight terminal emulator as default - to reduce bloat is reason enough! Power users can always install tmux or tilix or kitty or whatever they wish, that's the beauty of choice in action
    Last edited by direc85; 02 August 2022, 11:23 AM.

    Leave a comment:

Working...
X