I've been trying various terminal emulators lately, from the built-in gnome-terminal, aterm, xterm, wterm, to rxvt.
There are three things that set 4Pane apart from other file browsers: speed, lack of bloat, and a four pane interface.
Is there a specific mount point to use for a partition so that it would appear separately in the side pane?
I mean that it would appear separately in the left pane of PCManFM or Thunar the way windows-partition and external usb devices appear.
(I do not mean it being the /home partition.
i like this one. fast, multi-pane and no bloat.http://www.linux-magazine.com/Online/Bl
le-Managerhttp://www.4pane.co.uk/it is a pity thunar does not support multiple panes.
4Pane is a multi-pane, detailed-list file manager for Linux. It is designed to be fully-featured without bloat, and aims for speed rather than visual effects.
The Synaptic package manager's main window used to look similar to this (up to at least version 0.63):
Note the three panes.
However, in version 0.75, it looks like this:
So where did the detailed description pane (bottom right, first picture) go? And how do I reinstate it? This is really a make or break feature for me when browsing packages quickly.
I use it when I'm working with a lot of images. I've set it up with two tabbed panes on the upper half of the screen, and a single tabbed pane on the bottom. The bottom pane is set to display icons, that is, it becomes an image manager, so I don't need to have a separate image manager (e.g.
I have been bumping my head into a wall on this one, as I can't seem to find the correct syntax.
I am looking for a simple-to-understand, yet still useful usage example of the pipe-pane command in tmux.
I have tried the example in the man page, that of concatenating to a text "log file", but I don't see how I would use this feature in practice.