Is it possible to change the default terminal emulator on Windows (7 and 8 in particular) from Console to, for example, Console2 or ConEmu? In essence, I want all command line tools, whether launched by double clicking, from "Run" or by other processes to use the custom terminal.
Now I want to have my own back- and foreground color if I run lxterm or x-terminal-emulator. If I create the /.Xdefaults file which contains the color properties it does not affect the program call lxterm or x-terminal-emulator after restarting x-server. It only affects xterm. How setup those properties for lxterm?
I'm using bspwm as my environment and I have kitty and xterm terminal emulators. .desktop files with Terminal=true are vim, htop, ranger and etc. Opening these programs (in rofi) launches them with xterm. Is there a way to change this behavior without changing the .desktop files in /usr/share/applications? The system uses kitty if I uninstalled xterm tho. Thanks in advance, mates! My distro is archlinux btw (no meme intended).
Hi, I struggle with getting the Phyton interface to work. I am however able to see the messages sent on the serial port in my terminal emulator. So my question is: Is it possible to change settings via a terminal emulator? Either via sending an text file or by sending some commands?
Hi!
I have recently installed the Budgie DE on Arch Linux, and I'm really loving it! My terminal emulator of choice is urxvt, and I try to set this up as the default terminal emulator to start terminal applications from the Budgie menu. I have managed to set up the default terminal for the Nemo file manager through gsettings for the Cinnamon stuff, but I couldn't find a way to apply the same default settings for the Budgie desktop. What I tried:
Justin
Hi!
That was the setting I had when I installed the Budgie desktop and Gnome settings from the Arch repos, too. I didn't install Gnome terminal, I only installed the urxvt.
Now I have installed the Gnome terminal, and now the icon for Vim in the Budgie menu opens vim in the Gnome terminal. Even though the Gnome setting didn't change:
Justin
Thank you for the reply!
If you change your terminal emulator to something else, could you please tell me what the output for
$ gsettings get org.gnome.dektop.default-applications.terminal exec
is? If it stays gnome-terminal, than we can safely assume that Budgie has a different way of determining what the default terminal is for the Budgie menu.
A Media Access Control address (MAC) is the address given to every device that has access to the internet. One way to ensure your privacy and security is to change your MAC address. If you have a rooted Android device, you can change your MAC address permanently. If you have an older, unrooted device, you may be able to temporarily change your MAC address until your phone is rebooted. However, most newer Android phones and Samsung Galaxy devices will not allow you to temporarily change the MAC address without rooting the device. This wikiHow teaches you how to change your MAC address on a rooted device, and temporarily change your MAC address on an unrooted device.
If you're just getting into Linux, or had been for awhile and wanted to use something other than mate-terminal then there is no limit for the options available to you. But no matter your preference, you'll had noticed there's no easy way to change it all at once. You can change the default terminal Caja uses, but those changes don't apply to anything which could prompt x-terminal-emulator which is why MATE Menu doesn't respect your specification there, and you also cannot normally select x-terminal-emulator as a preferred application to make your life easier.
Save it, then when you next look in Preferred Applications, x-terminal-emulator will show up there. Once defined, it should open whatever x-terminal-emulator is configured for. For most people, this will usually be to open a terminal from the file manager.
You will be presented with a menu, which will allow you to select the default terminal. Based on the changes you performed above, this will also change the default terminal for MATE Menu and Caja's "Open in Terminal" action, as nature intended.
So basically, it changes `comint-mode` and all derivative modes (including `shell-mode`) so that ANSI escape codes are interpreted, especially those that move the cursor around, and those that set terminal colors.
Terminal type or emulation specifies how your computer and the host computer to which you are connected exchange information. You need to set your terminal type so that both computers communicate in the same way. Otherwise, your telnet, SSH, or terminal application will not have enough information to perform actions such as clearing the screen, moving the cursor around, and placing characters.
Inject context variable $$ into the developer console. It can be used to dynamically change terminal options. The API is available in sources/@types/obsidian-terminal.d.ts#DeveloperConsoleContext. (557fd14fc31f0da351d1690852d387f2fd600fac)
Icons may appear to the right of the terminal title on the tab label when a terminal's status changes. Some examples are a bell (macOS) and for tasks, displaying a check mark when there are no errors and an X otherwise. Hover the icon to read status information, which may contain actions.
Split terminals on Windows will start in the directory that the parent terminal started with. On macOS and Linux, split terminals will inherit the current working directory of the parent terminal. This behavior can be changed using the terminal.integrated.splitCwd setting:
Back in 2018, I made a two part series about terminal emulatorsthat was actually pretty painful to write. So I'm not going to retrythis here, not at all. Especially since I'm not submitting this to theexcellent LWN editors so I can get away with not being very goodat writing. Phew.
Still, it seems my future self will thank me for collecting mythoughts on the terminal emulators I have found out about since Iwrote that article. Back then, Wayland was not quite at the levelwhere it is now, being the default in Fedora (2016), Debian (2019),RedHat (2019), and Ubuntu (2021). Also, a bunch of folks thought theywould solve everything by using OpenGL for rendering. Let's see howthings stack up.
I've also seen the same reaction play out on Kitty's side ofthings. As anyone who worked on writing or playing with non-XTermterminal emulators, it's quite a struggle to make something(bug-for-bug) compatible with everything out there. And Kitty is inthat uncomfortable place right now where it diverges from the canonand needs its own entry in the ncurses database. I don't remember thespecifics, but the author also managed to get into fights with thosepeople as well, which I don't feel is reassuring for the project goingforward.
Update: a few months after this article was written, I did switch alaptop to Wayland, and as part of that migration, adopted foot. It'sgreat, and latency is barely noticeable. I recommend people try it outwhen they switch to Wayland, and, inversely, try out Wayland if onlyto try out Foot, it's a great terminal emulator.
MAC (Media Access Control) address is a unique identifier attached to each network interface controller (NIC), whether an ethernet NIC or wireless NIC. If the internet protocol (IP) address changes for a give NIC, the MAC address still remains, identifying the device on the network. So, this means that your network adapter has one, as well as your Android smartphone, phablet, or tablet. The MAC address allows each device that connects to the Internet or a local network to get identified by its unique 12-character code." } }, "@type": "Question", "name": "What is a MAC address used for?", "acceptedAnswer": "@type": "Answer", "text": "NIC devices contain unique MAC addresses. IP packets sent on the internet get sent from a MAC address, and those packets get sent to another MAC address. The receiving NIC device checks whether the destined packets match its address. If the address is not the same, the packets get discarded. This process ensures that all devices on the network get the correct IP packets. Aside from internet and network data transmission processes, MAC addresses get used by internet service providers (ISPs) such as cable companies and mobile providers to control bandwidth and other features on a specific device. MAC addresses are also used to track stolen devices, and many apps require them to interact with the device, such as cloud software. Furthermore, location services utilize your device's MAC address, such as Google Maps. The bottom line is that MAC addresses are essential to ensure the correct device gets the right data, and the communicating device or app interacts with the correct one." ] } BODY .fancybox-containerz-index:200000BODY .fancybox-is-open .fancybox-bgopacity:0.87BODY .fancybox-bg background-color:#0f0f11BODY .fancybox-thumbs background-color:#ffffff'use strict';var cls_disable_ads=function(n){function h(a,b){var c="function"===typeof Symbol&&a[Symbol.iterator];if(!c)return a;a=c.call(a);var d,e=[];try{for(;(void 0===b0
If the Root Checker app confirmed that your device has root access, then just read on. If not, skip to the next section, where we show you how to change the MAC address on your Android device without having root access.
MAC (Media Access Control) address is a unique identifier attached to each network interface controller (NIC), whether an ethernet NIC or wireless NIC. If the internet protocol (IP) address changes for a give NIC, the MAC address still remains, identifying the device on the network. So, this means that your network adapter has one, as well as your Android smartphone, phablet, or tablet. The MAC address allows each device that connects to the Internet or a local network to get identified by its unique 12-character code.
Edit: It seems like the shortcut implementation is not using the alternative, but rather a gsettings configuration. It's still a good idea to set the alternative symlink above, however, to use the keyboard shortcut some gsettings properties will need to be modified. Use dconf-editor (sudo apt-get install dconf-editor) or gsettings to change the default terminal application to gnome-terminal. You will need to modify the exec and exec-arg properties in the org.gnome.desktop.default-applications.terminal schema.
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