ranger is another good one. I very rarely end up using a terminal file manager though.
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Yeah. I keep hearing good things about ranger. Might give this a try soon
@theodore Midnight Commander
Yep, midnight commander is hands down the best file manager I've ever used.
With great respect, and speaking as someone who has used both very extensively, I would argue Total Commander (on Windows) has got the upper hand of all those traditional NC clones.
Any spesific reason on choosing it?
@theodore I've always used it I guess, back to Solaris, FreeBSD days, it does everything inc FTP
Nice. Will try it
lf is like ranger, but also very fast https://github.com/gokcehan/lf
I used ranger
previously, but I'm an lf
convert. It was a bit difficult to set some things up, but it's blazing fast and there are things about it I prefer.
ranger
and I have nothing but praise for it. That's as a Linux user of 15 years, formerly a bit of a skeptic about the use of such a tool. I use it not just as a file manager but as a platform for launching scripts and GUI programs via key bindings. I've pretty much turned it into a TUI desktop environment at this point. Because, yes, it is possible to do computing more efficiently than with a CLI alone, whatever the purists may say. For me, TUI tools are the sweet spot: less keystrokes, less memorizing, but also extremely hackable given that there's no GUI to deal with.
Addendum: and fzf
in the scripts! Like someone else said, this simple little tool makes so much possible.
I saw lf
and nnn
mentioned elsewhere and gave them a try, but they just didn't cut it compared to ranger
.
Same experience.
midnight commander, especially if i need to delete files/dirs with '-' and non-ascii characters. i do it without thinking.
Never been a fan of terminal file managers, I just use exa
and cd
. Also z
for directory jumping.
mc
Mostly ranger.
I consider ranger and fzf life changing, especially being able to get the full path of any file at my command prompt at a moment's notice. It's now as though navigating directories were gauche.
In this case, however, it cannot be said that I am using it as intended. The AUR helper I use, aurutils, uses Vifm to display the respective PKBUILD file during an update, for example.
I've tried a bunch like ranger, lf, vifm, sfm and even some different ones like clifm. I always come back to nnn though. Nothing beats its speed and config options.
Ranger, mostly for bulk renaming
Coreutils, rsync. In more complex scenarios zmv from zsh.
Yes, I almost not use any GUI to manage my files.
I had straight up just never considered that terminal file explorers existed. This post has opened my eyes, and so here is my Saved comment. (Maybe one day, kbin will implement saving without commenting...)
nnn
master race
Midnight Commander
I’ve tried ranger for some while, pretty neat, but I haven’t tried other terminal file mangers tho
I started with MC, went to nnn for a few months, then I moved to vifm.
I generally I only do simple operations on the command line. A few cp
, mv
, ls
... If I am doing much more than that I open a GUI manager.