Xfce 4.18 Is Released (xfce.org) 32
Long-time Slashdot reader slack_justyb brings news from the world of Linux desktop environments: After two years of development Xfce 4.18 is now live!
Several new features are available in each package. Thunar the default file manager for Xfce now includes a image preview sidebar, an editable toolbar that let's you reorder toolbar icons, file highlights, recursive search, and expanded undo/redo support.
Several new desktop settings allowing you to further configure the layout of the desktop are included. Additionally in this release for the desktop are, adaptive vsync support with GLX, and more enhancements for working with Wayland (though it may take a few more releases until everything works completely under Wayland).
You can find out more about the new release from the official tour here.
Also included is a new-filename Input Dialogue widget and a preliminary GUI-based shortcut editor...
Several new features are available in each package. Thunar the default file manager for Xfce now includes a image preview sidebar, an editable toolbar that let's you reorder toolbar icons, file highlights, recursive search, and expanded undo/redo support.
Several new desktop settings allowing you to further configure the layout of the desktop are included. Additionally in this release for the desktop are, adaptive vsync support with GLX, and more enhancements for working with Wayland (though it may take a few more releases until everything works completely under Wayland).
You can find out more about the new release from the official tour here.
Also included is a new-filename Input Dialogue widget and a preliminary GUI-based shortcut editor...
Mixed hidpi and fhd (Score:3)
So... does this mean it can finally deal with laptops where
* the internal panel is fhd
* A usually-connected monitor is 3840x2560, and it's the primary display when it is
* Title bars and window gadgets should be rendered at the native resolution of the display hosting the majority of the window... and dragging a window from one monitor to the other eventually results in its titlebar and content being re-rendered at the new dominant monitor's DPI
Basically... the behavior Windows has had since ~2016?
The last time I made a stab at using Xfce ~2 years ago, it didn't handle this scenario well at all (though in xfce's defense, ALL Linux window managers sucked at it).
Re: Mixed hidpi and fhd (Score:3)
Re: (Score:1)
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If you don't see a night-day difference in sharpness from 4k vs FHD, try turning off subpixel rendering and font smoothing. Then, you'll REALLY see it. Just be warned, once you've seen what you're missing, you won't ever willingly go back.
Smoothing and subpixel rendering makes jaggies look a little nicer, but stepping up from 2k-with-smoothing to 4k-without is like eliminating a diopter of uncorrected cylinder error (astigmatism).
Re: Mixed hidpi and fhd (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Mixed hidpi and fhd (Score:2)
Feel free to post one then.
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The problem with writing a generalized script is that the output names aren't standardized, they're whatever the vendor pulls out of their ass that day, so while writing a script is easy and possible in 1 line if you own the hardware and know the names of the outputs, (like for example if you ran "xrandr" yourself once without arguments on said hardware) writing something that can reliably scrape the output of the xrandr tool so someone who can't be bothered to read instructions themselves can run it withou
Re: (Score:2)
Can you give me a hint how? I'd love to have this if it's easy.
Re: (Score:1)
first:
xrandr
(no options first to see the names of your outputs)
then:
xrandr --output [output] --auto
or just, you know, "man xrandr" and read the fucking directions yourself
Re: (Score:2)
That's just setting the resolution. It doesn't affect the high-DPI scaling.
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Thanks! (Score:3)
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Recursive search? (Score:2)
Xfce (Score:4, Funny)
How the fsck do you pronounce that?
Re:Xfce (Score:4, Funny)
"X" "F" "C" "E" .
Like one would pronounce NSA, CIA, or FBI but without the Gestapo accent.
Re: (Score:2)
What does XFCE stand then? :P
Re: Xfce (Score:2)
Config Validation? (Score:2)
Does anybody know if they've fixed integrity validation of config writes?
I am so glad XFCE can give any Grandma a good UI (and for old machines) but with customization (Grandma never does that) eventually a config write will trash the files and next boot fails.
Several machines, ext4, zfs, xfs, same thing.
I moved to Plasma and Nemo for poweruser work but XFCE is a treat for a VM that needs a GUI. I just never customize (or devops the configuration). Still it would be nice.
Re:Config Validation? (Score:4)
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I am using Debian GNU/Linux which allows you to choose from about 10 desktops during installation with default setting to Gnome. Debian with Gnome is the most usable Linux on my machine with 2 GB RAM. Everything is fast and it automatically installs vmware tools during installation. After the first boot you already have full display resolution and shared folders to host machine. Nice.
Re: (Score:3)
"is responsive and stable environment." You forgot "ugly as sin".
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"is responsive and stable environment." You forgot "ugly as sin".
And a memory hog that allows you to do what it thinks is good for you.
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I'm a very happy Gnome user thanks.
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Stable? Really?
Prefer Bar over Dock Launch Bar (Score:2)
Dark is the new dark in themes. I am surprised we don't see more screenies with a dark themes.
What would be wrong with calling t
Re:Prefer Bar over Dock Launch Bar (Score:4, Informative)
Unlike some desktops, XFCE allows you to easily configure it the way you want. I personally like a bar at the top with date/time, menu button, and a few quick launch items, and the bottom has window buttons and a multi-desktop chooser.
Who cares what the file manager is called, it's the thing that happens when you click the folder looking thingie. They can's ALL be called file manager just like we can't just give a choice like you can install "Operating System", "Operating System", "Operating system", or "Operating System" on your PC.
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