Le mardi 04 novembre 2008 à 13:55 -0500, Jeremy Salwen a écrit : > In debian, the default mode for nautilus is for it to open everything in a > new window. This means that > if you open a folder, the old one stays open, and thus you build up a huge > stack of windows if you > don't close the old one every time you open a new one. On top of that, the > windows open very close to > right on top of eachother, so when attempting to close the old window, you > must be careful not to close > the one you want to open. I suppose that this is necessary as there is no > back button in the > non-browsing mode, but it doesn't seem like there is any benifit to having > the non-browsing mode. > > I don't see any case in which the non-browsing mode is preferred over > browsing mode, which is why I > suggest browsing mode be the default. Normally I would just start nautilus > with --browse and not > suggest changing anything, but other applications open nautilius, such as > gnome-mount-applet, and when > they do so, it is not in browsing mode.
You can change the default in the nautilus preferences. The default will remain spatial mode for the moment, though. Cheers, -- .''`. : :' : We are debian.org. Lower your prices, surrender your code. `. `' We will add your hardware and software distinctiveness to `- our own. Resistance is futile.
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