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I double click to select. Sometimes my clicking finger doesn't care to stop at one press. In Dolphin, if the file I was was placed by me, I usually know where it is, but if it is a file placed the the OS, I often resor to using the 'find' feature in Dolphin. Find works a lot better than the search feature in Windows. I don't use Windows search anymore. Agent Ransack fills that role for me. (I give Kubuntu and Windows almost equal time on my computer so I can stay comfortable on both.)
.... Now I'm happy with a touchpad. Have you tried one yet? My left hand doesn't tremble as much as my right, and even though I'm right-handed I adapted quickly to using the touchpad with my left....
I tried the touch pad several times but involuntary "taps" and/or inconsistent pressure forced me to disable it.
"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
So, I have just tested Dolphin's search-feature and must say I'm impressed. It found all the files I wanted in a few seconds (unlike Windows search).
And that even though I deactivated file-indexing.
Until now I have never been a fan of the search-feature and never really needed it (good old "Ordnung" ) but I can see how comfortable it can be.
Anyway, thanks to (all of) your input I do now understand why "single-click" is standard for KDE. I always thought the Devs only did it to distinguish the (very Windows-like) KDE from Windows.
Wow, Steve, you've described my wife's purse exactly, except that she doesn't have a Nepomuk index running on it.
Some things have literally disappeared for ever in that bottomless pit!
I'm late to this thread but:
+1 and funniest thing I've read today! My wife is exactly the same. Unfortunately, this spills out into the kitchen and other areas of her life that I have to deal with <sigh>. I think she lives in a world best described as a big box with everything thrown in it. It never surprises her when something appears in an oddball location or something isn't where I've said it should be. No matter; I love her dearly. Clearly, it's my issue not hers!
"A nation that is afraid to let its people judge the truth and falsehood in an open market is a nation that is afraid of its people.”
– John F. Kennedy, February 26, 1962.
I didnt even know that ^^. My point was that it is the standard setting in KDE while it is not in Windows.
And I believe there is no other Desktop Environment that uses "single click to open" as standard; at least Gnome (3/2), XFCE and LXDE dont. This setting also was the first thing I noticed when first confronted with linux (Open Suse 10.3 – I couldnt and still cannot get along with the package management).
In my wife's case it's not genetic at least. Her Mom is very neat and organized. I haven't thought about it too hard - I'm too busy looking for things! LOL!
One time, when I let it get to me and I complained about it, she sald "My Dad used to say the same thing - "A place for every thing and everything in it's place..."." I realized then this was not a battle I was going to win. Now, I just let it be - and have her look for something when I need it
You might as well go all the way with your renaming there... com"pooper" --> corn"pooper"
Hey, Feathers...back to your favorite topic again! bwahahahaha
FFS, lol.
I use double click because I have to use Windows at work... it's bad enough not having "focus follow the cursor" at work (I scroll the wrong window all the time), I think having different numbers of clicks for opening files would do my head in!
I think the second part of the question was about browsing through files using folders vs directory "trees"; thumbnails vs lists vs details etc.
I use double click because I have to use Windows at work... it's bad enough not having "focus follow the cursor" at work (I scroll the wrong window all the time), I think having different numbers of clicks for opening files would do my head in!
Feathers, I showed you how to change Windows so that you can open files with single click.
You can also change the default mouse behavior. There are a couple different ways, and they have slightly different results. Neither is exactly like focus-follows-mouse in X11, but one of these might work for you. See http://douglaswhitaker.com/focus-fol...se-in-windows/ for more information.
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