2011/9/22 Jo-Erlend Schinstad <joerlend.schins...@gmail.com> > Den 22. sep. 2011 20:40, skrev Alex Launi: > > Can someone explain why we think we want the ability to run rm directly >> from unity anyway? Is there a single person who wants this functionality who >> doesn't have a terminal open all of the time anyway? >> > > rm is a bad example. But being able to restart compiz using "compiz > --replace" without opening a terminal and running "nohup compiz --replace" > is a good reason to keep it around. Or to quickly open a root nautilus. > (Which itself is an example of situations when it should not be necessary to > run a command) Stuff like that. > > There's a much better solution to this: add a key to default unity to enter command mode. Something like ~ or / or > (.) would work fine.
In other words: 1. Press unity key to show the dash. 2. Press ~ to enter command mode. Press backspace to return to normal mode. 3. Type a command, ideally with tab autocompletion Step 2 is what unity is currently missing (i.e. a way to enter command mode). Autocompletion is also a pretty important feature. I'm pretty sure most dash-like launchers have a command mode (I'm pretty sure I could do that with gnome-do). I'd actually find this more convenient than Alt-F2, because Alt-F2 is pretty awkward to type on my laptop (combination of tiny function keys and awkward angle). With this approach, Alt-F2 would still enter command mode in a single step, just like now.
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