![]() ![]() Note that you can use another function key, or assign a key-combo, as long as it isn’t already being used for another task, but the F4 is a great choice, as it isn’t already used by Caja or the system. ![]() For me, hitting the F4 key is quicker and easier than clicking a toolbar button, so I’ll show you how to create the script and assign a hotkey to it. And the best part is you can even assign an accelerator (keyboard shortcut or hotkey) to it. But it seems there is a general issue with Caja extensions being that they cannot set keyboard shortcuts for their menu items, because libcaja-extension doesn’t provide this ability.īut you can get around this with a script, and you don’t even need to have caja-open-terminal installed, as long as caja-actions is installed (run sudo apt-get install caja-actions if it isn’t). I couldn’t find a way to add an Open in Terminal button to Caja’s toolbar, likely because it is provided by an extension, not built into Caja, so I wanted to see if I could create a keyboard shortcut for it. While in Nautilus the only way to access that is via a right-click, in Nemo you can actually add a button for it to the toolbar. One option that most Linux users find invaluable is being able to open a terminal pointing to the current folder, and while file-managers like Nautilus, Nemo and Caja don’t ship with that by default, it’s easily installed with a plugin or extension: nautilus-open-terminal, nemo-terminal and, in the case of Caja, caja-open-terminal (which also gets installed with the caja-extensions package).
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