Nautilus Terminal 3 in Ubuntu 18.04

F4

Supports copy / paste using Ctrl+Shift+C / Ctrl+Shift+V (there's no copy / paste context menu though)

/ (there's no copy / paste context menu though) Supports drag & drop of files and folders on the terminal (it auto-completes the path of the dragged file or folder)

Uses the default shell for the user

Detects running process: if something is running in the terminal, the cd command is not sent to the shell

With version 3.3.0: the terminal can be display at the top or bottom of the Nautilus window

How to install Nautilus Terminal 3

sudo dnf copr enable tomaszgasior/mushrooms sudo dnf install nautilus-terminal

sudo add-apt-repository ppa:flozz/nautilus-terminal sudo apt update sudo apt install nautilus-terminal

nautilus-terminal

python-nautilus-terminal

python3-nautilus-terminal

pip

For Linux distributions using python3-nautilus (e.g. Ubuntu 20.04):

Nautilus Terminal on Ubuntu 20.04; ignore my terminal color scheme, I know it's not exactly readable in this screenshot but I took it in a hurry

sudo apt install python3-pip python3-nautilus python3-psutil

pip

python3 -m pip install --user --upgrade nautilus_terminal

For Linux distributions using nautilus-python with Python 2 (e.g. Ubuntu 19.10):

sudo apt install python-pip python-nautilus python-psutil

pip

python2 -m pip install --user --upgrade nautilus_terminal

nautilus -q

F4

sudo apt install dconf-editor

org > flozz > nautilus-terminal

How to uninstall Nautilus Terminal 3

sudo apt remove nautilus-terminal

python2 -m pip uninstall nautilus_terminal

nautilus -q

This Nautilus extension is a re-implementation of the old Nautilus Terminal that was initially only available for Nautilus 2.x, and later 3.0 and 3.2, which should work with recent Nautilus versions.and its initial behavior (if the terminal should be displayed or hidden when starting a new Nautilus window) can be set using Dconf Editor. The terminal can be resized using your mouse and also, the default height can be set using Dconf Editor.Other Nautilus Terminal 3 features include:The tool does not yet support configuring the terminal appearance, but this is on the to do list.(you can download the packages from the PPA for Ubuntu 18.04 or 19.04 too, in case you don't want to add the PPA). You need to download and install the following packages from this PPA:and(don't install).To install the packages mentioned above in Debian or Ubuntu 20.04 / Pop!_OS 20.04, use this command:Installing these packages differs from one Linux distribution to another, so search for and install them using your Linux distribution's package manager.Then, no matter the Linux distribution you use, as long as it's using Nautilus with Python 3 (python3-nautilus), runto install (or upgrade from an older version) the Nautilus Terminal extension for your user:To install these packages in Debian or Ubuntu / Pop!_OS, use this command:Installing these packages differs from one Linux distribution to another, so search for and install them using your Linux distribution's package manager.Then, no matter the Linux distribution you use, as long as it's using Nautilus with Python 2 (nautilus-python is using Python 2), runto install (or upgrade from an older version) the Nautilus Terminal extension for your user:To configure Nautilus Terminal (such as setting the terminal to be hidden by default and only show it after you press, display the terminal at the bottom of the Nautilus window instead of the default top display, etc.) you can use Dconf Editor.Install Dconf Editor in Ubuntu or Debian using:Now you can change a few Nautilus Terminal settings by opening Dconf Editor and navigating toIf Nautilus Terminal 3 was installed in Ubuntu by using its PPA, simply remove the installed package:If Nautilus Terminal 3 was installed using PIP, remove it like this:You may also need to restart Nautilus: