With OIT, you don't need to know, it's simpler: go to the partition > right-click > Open in Terminal > you enter it. In case you don't know: Ubuntu auto-mounts partitions at /media, while Fedora does at /run, another distro may be at /mnt or somewhere else. OIT makes you don't need to know where your system mounts the partitions. But with OIT it's simpler: go to the folder > right-click > Open In Terminal > invoke a command line sudo rm -v > targeted file(s) deleted.ĭeleting system files with sudo is easier now Without OIT, you would type many commands, perhaps with some mistakes. deb files stored > right-click > Open In Terminal > invoke a command line sudo dpkg -i *.deb > all packages installed. ![]() Using OIT is simpler: go to folder where. Imagine how useful doing this if you often running LiveCD Session like me (could be 20 times a day). If you use OIT, you just open the Terminal right at the folder of that shell script, and call the script. For example, imagine one shell script myscript.sh contains 3 commands: to set the time, to remove the junk files, and to reduce screen brightness at once. Using OIT makes you quicker to run a shell script. For convenience here, I shorten 'Open In Terminal' into 'OIT'. By simply using right-click > Open in Terminal, you avoid all those unnecessary hassles by directly go to the selected folder. What are them? They are the navigation in the console (typing navigation commands, knowing where to find what, change directory, list content of directory, print working directory, etc.). ![]() Without Open In Terminal ('OIT'): all repetitive jobs should be done manually by you. Subscribe to UbuntuBuzz Telegram Channel to get article updates directly. However, despite this article is for Nautilus, you can apply the same examples in Caja, Nemo, DFM, or another file manager as long as it has 'Open In Terminal'. This article reveals some examples that are helpful for repetitive jobs in daily use. The file manager of Ubuntu, Files (or formally called Nautilus), has a very useful feature called 'Open In Terminal' ('OIT' for short).
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