Misplaced Pages

Thunar

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.

Thunar is a file manager for Linux and other Unix-like systems, initially written using the GTK+ 2 toolkit and later ported to the GTK+ 3 toolkit. It started to ship with Xfce in version 4.4 RC1 and later. Thunar is developed by Benedikt Meurer, and was originally intended to replace XFFM, Xfce's previous file manager. It was initially called Filer but was changed to Thunar due to a name clash.

#910089

9-422: Thunar is designed to start up faster and be more responsive than some other Linux file managers, such as GNOME Files and Konqueror . Accessibility is accomplished using GNOME Accessibility Toolkit . Like the rest of Xfce, Thunar is designed to comply with standards, such as those stated at freedesktop.org . Thunar is simple and lightweight by design, but its functionality can be extended through plugins. Thunar

18-486: A former Apple engineer) in 1999. The name "Nautilus" was a play on words, evoking the shell of a nautilus to represent an operating system shell . At the beginning of 2000, Richard Hestgray published the first screenshots of Nautilus 0.1 preview release : In December 2000, article under the title «Nautilus, GNOME’s new file manager» was published in the Linux Magazine . The Nautilus Desktop Shell

27-500: Is intended to supersede the GMC file manager (which was derived from the venerable Midnight Commander) in new versions of GNOME. What looks superficially like Yet Another File Manager appears at second glance to be a great deal more. Nautilus replaced Midnight Commander in GNOME 1.4 (2001) and has been the default file manager from version 2.0 onwards. Nautilus was the flagship product of

36-621: Is the Old Saxon name of Thor , the god of thunder in Norse mythology , and uses Mjölnir , Thor's hammer, as its icon. The Thunar interface was developed prior to the coding of its core. A minimally functional software mockup was built in Python . Features were added and UI elements changed iteratively to react to test user input. Thunar provides an API for third-party developers: Thunar can also be extended by writing scripts to be placed in

45-628: The GIO library , Nautilus tracks modification of local files in real time, eliminating the need to refresh the display. GIO internally supports Gamin and FAM , Linux's inotify and Solaris ' File Events Notification system. GNOME Files relies on Tracker (formerly named "MetaTracker") to index files and is hence able to provide fast file search results. Batch renaming was introduced with GNOME Files version 3.22 (2016). GNOME Files version 3.22 adds native, integrated file compression and decompression. By default, handling of archive files (e.g. .tar .gz )

54-456: The pointer is hovering over them. In earlier versions, Nautilus included original vectorized icons designed by Susan Kare . GNOME Files relies on a file system abstraction layer (provided by GVfs ) to browse local and remote file systems, including but not limited to FTP sites, Windows SMB shares, OBEX protocol (often implemented on cellphones), files transferred over shell protocol , HTTP and WebDAV and SFTP servers. Using

63-583: The context menu for various file types. GNOME Files GNOME Files , formerly and internally known as Nautilus , is the official file manager for the GNOME desktop. GNOME Files, same as Nautilus, is a free and open-source software under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License . Nautilus, the predecessor of the GNOME Files, was originally developed by Eazel and Andy Hertzfeld (founder of Eazel and

72-654: The now-defunct Eazel Inc. GNOME Files was first released in 2001 and development has continued ever since. The following is a brief timeline of its development history: Bookmarks, window backgrounds, notes, and add-on scripts are all implemented, and the user has the choice between icon, list, or compact list views. In browser mode, Nautilus keeps a history of visited folders, similar to web browsers, permitting quick revisiting of folders. Nautilus can display previews of files in their icons, be they text files, images, sound or video files via thumbnailers such as Totem . Audio files are previewed (played back over GStreamer ) when

81-473: Was handed off to File Roller (or another tool). Users now benefit from a progress bar, undo support, and an archive creation wizard. The new "extract on open" behavior, which automatically extracts an archive file by double clicking it, can be disabled in the preferences. MIME types (also called "media type" or "content type") are standardized by the IANA , then the freedesktop.org project takes care that

#910089