I want to add gloobus to nemo in linux mint. But native support is not available therefore I want to add a keyboard shortcut to nemo to open gloobus with selected element.
I already found this where is described how to change shortcuts and I found this where is described how to add an action to the context-menu.
Does anybody know how to add KEYBOARD shortcuts to do the same?
for Nemo 2.2.4 under Linux Mint 17 I do this:
Go to: /home/yourusername/.gnome2/accels --- NOTE: .gnome2 is a hidden folder!
Open the "nemo" file with your text editor
Add your shortcut: for example, when having 2 panes to move a folder or file from one pane to the other using "CTRL+j":
(gtk_accel_path "/DirViewActions/Move to next pane" "j")
Note: remove the ";" at the beginning of the line
Restart the GTK system: sudo killall -u yourusername
Open Nemo, to test my example: press "F3" choose different folders on each pane, select one folder or file from one pane and press "Ctrl+j", that folder or file should move from one pane to the other one.
There are a lot of different commands to customize in that file, be careful not to use a current shortcut!
Hope this helps!
Related
I'm using PhpStorm in Mac to code and i want to debug my errors. I have a message in my terminal to set the editor for React Native tools.
PRO TIP
When you see Red Box with stack trace, you can click any
stack frame to jump to the source file. The packager will launch your
editor of choice. It will first look at REACT_EDITOR environment
variable, then at EDITOR.
To set it up, you can add something like
export REACT_EDITOR=atom to your ~/.bashrc or ~/.zshrc depending on
which shell you use.
I've added these lines to ~/.bashrc but nothing happened when i click on the error :
export PATH=$PATH:/usr/local/bin/pstorm
export REACT_EDITOR=pstorm
How can i set correctly REACT_EDITOR to PhpStorm so that when i click on the error it jumps to my code?
For mac os you need to add to ~/.bashrc or .zprofile:
Add export REACT_EDITOR="webstorm" or pstorm
Don't forget to close all of your terminal windows and restart the react-native packager before you try it.
Create a shortcut to open WebStorm:
Open WebStorm
Press ⇧ twice to open the search window
Type “Create Command Line Launcher…” and press Enter
Click OK
That's it.
/usr/local/bin should be in the PATH environment variable by default. You should be able to run webstorm from anywhere in the shell. Run webstorm /usr/local/bin/webstorm to test the command.
You can find a code which opens editors here or in your project node_modules/#react-native-community/cli-tools/build/launchEditor.js
I solved this problem by creating symlink.
sudo ln -s /Applications/WebStorm.app/Contents/MacOS/webstorm /usr/local/bin/webstorm
I am very new to Arch Linux and have chrooted into the system. I screwed up the wireless profile, but have fixed them in netctl. How do I write to the file and exit out of the text editor that is prompted for you to edit the file?
To write to the file:
sudo nano /path/to/file
And to exit from the nano text editor press Control X.
Then Y to confirm save and exit, and enter to commit the save.
It depends on what type of editor has been opened. Which you can set in the .bashrc file.
If it is nano press ctrl+o to save the changes and ctrl+x to quit
If it is vi or vim, Goto command mode by pressing escape. Then type :wq to write and press enter.
If you are not able to make out between the two, just check if it has shortcut key info at the bottom of the page, if yes. It is nano or else it is vi.
PS: Since you are new the arch linux I assumed that you have not installed any other CLI based editors.
I often want to open a file browser to open a file and then close the browser.
Is there a way (a plasmoid, a dolphin plugin, another browser...) which could allow me to have a file browser "in the style of" yakuake? (i.e. unfolding with a shortcut, and re-folding when I chose the file I want)
Took me some time, but finally managed to get what you want (and eventually, what I also want :) with xdotool (on Ubuntu sudo apt-get install xdotool).
With this script, you can have any application behave like you asked:
#!/bin/bash
SEARCHED_WINDOW=$1
COMMAND=${2:-$SEARCHED_WINDOW}
SEARCHED_WINDOW_CLASSNAME=toggleApp$SEARCHED_WINDOW
WINDOW_ID=$(xdotool search --classname $SEARCHED_WINDOW_CLASSNAME)
VISIBLE_WINDOW_ID=$(xdotool search --onlyvisible --classname $SEARCHED_WINDOW_CLASSNAME 2>/dev/null)
if [ -z "$WINDOW_ID" ]; then
$COMMAND 2>/dev/null &
pid=$!
NEW_WINDOW_ID=$(xdotool search --onlyvisible --sync --pid $pid 2>/dev/null)
xdotool set_window --classname $SEARCHED_WINDOW_CLASSNAME $NEW_WINDOW_ID
xdotool windowfocus $NEW_WINDOW_ID
elif [ -z "$VISIBLE_WINDOW_ID" ]; then
xdotool windowmap $WINDOW_ID
xdotool windowfocus $WINDOW_ID
else
xdotool windowunmap $VISIBLE_WINDOW_ID
fi
(Inspired from here)
You call it like this:
./toggle.sh dolphin
If the command to launch the program is different, you can add a second parameter:
./toggle.sh appName commandToLaunchApp
What this script does is the following:
If the app is not running: launch it, give window a specific class, and give window focus
If the app is running but with no visible window: make window visible and give it focus
Else, i.e. app is running and visible: hide it.
All you have left to do is map a shortcut to the above-mentionned command to launch the script. In KDE : System settings > Shortcuts and gestures > Custom shortcuts. Then Edit > New > Global shortcut > Command.
Plus, this script works with any app, should work with any EWMH compliant window manager, and allows you to have other instances of the same app (this is why I added the class trick).
The closest solution to what you want is the Widget Layer Compiz plugin.
This plugin enables you to make appear a layer on top of your workspace. You can configure this layer to hold windows of your choice, in your case that would be the file manager. It has a hide/show feature which you can bind to a hotkey.
It uses Window Matching rules to define the windows to hold.
More information on http://wiki.compiz.org/Plugins/Widget
However, this would imply that you use the Compiz compositing manager.
I don't know, how that happened but before today I could right click on any folder and there would be and an option Git Bash here. But today I dont have that option. Anyone knows how to get that back?
HOW TO FIX WITHOUT RE-Installing:
I got this problem after moving all my programs off of my main hard drive and pasting them into my "P" drive. But kept all of the directory structures the same.
Git was moved from:
C:\DEV\PROG\GIT
TO:
P:\DEV\PROG\GIT
1: Open The Registry Editor:
Type "regedit" in start menu search and hit enter.
2: Find the context menu shortcut configuration for "git bash here"
In regedit: Menu "Edit" > "Find" > "Find what" and enter "git_shell"
3: Edit the Data value so that path points to the correct location.
In my case I changed:
"C:\DEV\PROG\GIT\git-bash.exe" "--cd=%v."
TO:
"P:\DEV\PROG\GIT\git-bash.exe" "--cd=%v."
Screen shot included below.
Steps if you can't use the reinstall metod.
Use REGEDIT
1/ Open regedit (search it if needed)
2/ Go to 'HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Classes/Directory/Background'
3/ Create new key 'shell'
4/ Create new key 'Git bash here' (or whatever name you want to see in the menu)
5/ Create new key 'command' (must be named command)
At this point point you'll have
'HKEY_CURRENT_USER/Software/Directory/Background/shell/Git bash here/command'
6/ Edit the value of the command key as follow 'pathToGit/git-bash.exe'
Update or open new windows explorer and you'll see it when right clicking.
Image to sum this up :
Reinstall Git and select:
Context menu entries: "Git Bash Here" (and the "Git GUI Here" option)
During the installation. Can't say why it disappeared, but this should bring it back.
Run this script (AddGitToExplorerContextMenu.reg).
You may need to update the location of Git. You can add it
manually through regedit also
Windows Registry Editor Version 5.00
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\Background\shell\git_shell]
#="Git Bash"
[HKEY_CLASSES_ROOT\Directory\Background\shell\git_shell\command]
#="\"C:\\Program Files\\Git\\git-bash.exe\" \"--cd=%v.\""
Had the same issue , realized that previously right clicking anywhere or inside the folder the Option would show but now I had to select or highlight the folder and then right_click for the option to show.
Uninstall Git completely and delete the Git folder in program files.
Install Git.
From the Context menu, select "Git Bash" & "Git GUI here" options.
I found what I was looking for was in the left pane, not in the right folder. And still using the right-click.
Press SHIFT+F10. It will appear
After Windows 11 update, it got invisible. I first uninstalled the older version and installed the latest 2.35 version. it was still not visible.
It is still there albeit inside another folder in the context menu that comes with a right click.
By going inside any folder right-click INSIDE that folder, in German OS there is
Shift + F10 combination you have it there like before. Or without this shortcut combination go inside Further option (This last) it is there.
It worked fine when I was using Win 10 ,after upgrading my windows to 11 it stopped working.
I solved my problem by following these simple steps.
Uninstall Git completely on computer
Download it here : https://git-scm.com/download/win
Install it
It works fine now!!!
Once you right click on the folder , click on 'Show More Options'.
Now you should be able to see all the earlier options such as 'Git Bash Here'
How do I install uncrustify? I followed the instruction to install uncrustify but when I run it, it does not work. Can anyone give me some help installing this tool? I want to run it on objective-c code in xcode 4. Thanks in adavance
On OS X Mavericks 10.9.1 :
1- to install brew, open a terminal windows and type :
ruby -e "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.github.com/Homebrew/homebrew/go/install)"
It will ask you to download some other files, answer OK for all (for more information see : http://brew.sh/index_fr.html).
2 - to install uncrusify, open a terminal windows an type :
brew install uncrustify
3 - to make your code beautiful, download BBUncrustifyPlugin-Xcode available at https://github.com/benoitsan/BBUncrustifyPlugin-Xcode
You will just have to :
compile the project
copy the file uncrusify.cfg in your home directory
restart Xcode.
NB : With BBUncrustifyPlugin, you don't need to use Automator.
4 - After restarting Xcode, use the menu Edit > Uncrustify Selected Files to uncrustify the selected items in the project navigator.
Your code is now beautiful! That's magic!
post-scriptum : You can easily change your uncrusify configuration file by using :
https://github.com/ryanmaxwell/UncrustifyX
http://universalindent.sourceforge.net (better in my case)
I hope that this will help!
I setup Uncrustify with Xcode 4 like so: http://blog.carbonfive.com/2011/03/10/code-formatting-in-xcode-4/
Can you explain what you tried to do, what you expected to happen, and how it didn't work?
Download zip
On Windows, download the latest version of Uncrustify here: https://sourceforge.net/projects/uncrustify/files/latest/download
Extract zip
The program is a standalone exe, so just extract the downloaded uncrustify-...-win32.zip file anywhere. For this example, I'll use C:\Uncrustify. So, the uncrustify.exe would be in that directory.
Add directory to PATH System Environment Variable
In Windows 7+: Type Winkey + env - Select "Edit the system environment variables"
On the Advanced tab, click the Environment Variables button at the bottom.
In the System variables section at the bottom, click the Path variable, then click the Edit... button.
Click the New button, and type C:\Uncrustify, or the directory that you extracted uncrustify.exe to.
Important: Click OK to close the dialog boxes or your change will not save.
Verify
In a CMD window, typing where uncrustify should return the path to the uncrustify.exe.
In my case it shows C:\Uncrustify\uncrustify.exe
Close Atom and reopen it. Now you should be able to atom-beautify and it will use Uncrustify to format your selection