It's a psychological thing... F2 is not part of the file name so it
seems very unnatural for me to have to press F2 when my mind and hand is
still on "mouse mode" (well, I grew up in a windows environment so maybe
that's the psychological cause)

It's important for users having used to the feature. People will think
"hey I can do this very simple thing in windows, why can't I do it in
Linux?". Btw, my mom, dad, brother, and sister don't know the F2
shortcut. They use single click on windows to rename files. It's not
like the "del" key where it's obvious that it's for deleting stuffs.

You might say that it annoys you when you accidentally activates the
rename function, but I beg to argue on this one. How often do you
accidentally activate it when the feature is available? I for myself can
say that it almost never happens to me. I don't press F2 on windows
because the chance of accidentally hitting F1 is higher and pressing
that will load windows help which slows down the system when it loads.

* Having this feature:
--- people used to the feature will use it happily
--- if accidents happen, you can just hit ESC or click anywhere else. People 
encountering the accident will be annoyed, but hey it's called an accident 
because it rarely happens.

* Not having this feature
--- people used to the feature will be annoyed. And since I think renaming 
files is quite a common operation they will be annoyed many times
--- you can use F2, but I think it is prone to mishit F1 or F3

Just my opinion...

@soliac: on windows the rename mode is entered only if we click on the
file name. So clicking on the icon won't activate it.

-- 
Cannot rename by clicking on a file
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/48671
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