Hello,

I've been having some trouble turning off or otherwise changing the "button 
bar" to a "text location bar" when saving files with most GTK applications (one 
exception being gvim) in GNOME 2.30.0. The button in nautilus which normally 
toggles the feature is absent when saving or downloading, and it appears that 
nautilus's gconf-editor setting "always_use_location_entry" only affects the 
file browser or "open file" dialog, regardless of the application (e.g., 
Firefox, InkScape, GIMP). When I'm working with code, the buttonbar "feature" 
isn't a problem, but as an "end user" it tends to get in the way of developing 
multimedia content, graphics and web other content.

http://library.gnome.org/users/user-guide/2.27/nautilus-location-bar.html.en

The gconf setting corresponds to the following lines of code:

Ln 113 of "nautilus/libnautilus-private/nautilus-global-preferences.h" 
(definition)

Ln 74 & 75 of 
"nautilus/libnautilus-private/apps_nautilus_preferences.schemas.in" (default 
setting)
Ln 364-366 of "nautilus/libnautilus-private/nautilus-global-preferences.c" 
(default XML setting)

I know that this issue has been raised before, but I have not found much in the 
way of documentation for which libraries are responsible for it and am not able 
to replace nautilus completely with the use of less stable code like LXDE or 
KDE. Aside from Mr. Torvalds's less-than-tactful approach to correspondence, I 
haven't been turning up much of anything productive in the way of turning off 
the magic buttons and sincerely hope that his version control system proves to 
be more productive than his tirades with respect to the software engineering 
process. To be clear, nesting directories is a valuable feature, which requires 
the ability to quickly enter the path when saving files. Konqueror has a good 
approach with its new mapping feature, which might help me to reorganize things 
at a level which is less than three deep after the home directory, but that's 
still five levels deep from root. Dolphin, on the other hand, is significantly 
more confusing than the disappearing button i
 n nautilus--Can we add another button?

http://mail.gnome.org/archives/usability/2005-December/msg00021.html
http://www.computerworld.com/s/article/9126619/Q_A_Linux_founder_Linus_Torvalds_talks_about_open_source_identity?taxonomyId=18&pageNumber=5

Having said that, I am finding the process of manually resolving dependencies 
to be a little daunting in the pursuit of one feature while building the 
current git release of nautilus locally. Is there a way to resolve source 
dependencies through git? I can use Debian source packages or Gentoo eBuilds to 
resolve stable or historic code dependencies, but it seems that contributing 
something to the current development branches could prove to be more relevant 
to more users.

The nautilus that I can click on when I go to my home folder or bookmarks under 
the "places" menu option on the panel and the one that I get when I try to save 
a file from a GTK+ program are obviously different. In what ways are the 
underlying functions defined differently and in what source code or what files 
would I find them? Can I install a historic version of the file browser without 
breaking things?

Relevent ChangeLogs?:
2003-10-11
  * src/nautilus-location-entry.c: Moved the tab-completing entry
    into its own widget.
  * src/nautilus-navigation-window.c:
        (always_use_location_entry_changed),
        (nautilus_navigation_window_set_bar_mode):
        Always synchronize the location bar button with the pathbar
        mode.
$ grep -c location_bar ChangeLog*
ChangeLog-20000414:1
ChangeLog-20000625:20
ChangeLog-20000831:9
ChangeLog-20001018:15
ChangeLog-20010201:9
ChangeLog-20010420:13
ChangeLog-20041029:20
ChangeLog-20090417:7
ChangeLogs:94

Any help would be greatly appreciated--I'm saving a lot of files right now.

Thank you,

Adam Rigg
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