![]() ![]() You can set filters to display files and directories that match a specified name, date, and even permissions criteria. One of the best features of EmelFM2 is its ability to trim the list of files in the panes. The interface also has an output pane, which shows the results of commands and several buttons for most common functions such as moving, copying, renaming items, creating a symlink etc. EmelFM2 sports a mouse-friendly user interface with lots of functionality available via the right-click context menu.ĮMELFM2: With a mouse friendly interface, this is one of the easiest file managers to get to grips with It works on anything that can run GTK+2, and a port is available for Nokia's Maemo platform. Verdict: A complete replacement to the point-and-click file manager for KDE users, but a pain to setup for others.ĮmelFM2 - A nice shaken and stirred modern OFM that blends the old with the newįor an app that's still only halfway to its first 1.x release, EmelFM2 has a whole bundle of useful features. For the purists, the best bit is that Krusader can be controlled completely from the keyboard. Like all good OFMs, Krusader ships with its own terminal emulator with autocompletion. It also tracks popular URLs and since Krusader is well integrated into KDE, the bookmark manager can let KDE's wallet handle the passwords for remote connections. Then there's BookMan for organising bookmarks of local folders and remote connections. To manage mounted file systems Krusader bundles MountMan, along with a graphical disk usage tool based on the filelight disk space analyser. Krusader also has a front-end to the locate command, which relies on a database to hunt for files. Its internal viewer/editor, KrViewer can open multiple files in tabs, can export documents as HTML, has a spellchecker and syntax highlighting for various configuration files, databases, and several scripting, and programming languages, and even display pictures. Its advanced file search, called KruSearcher can search for files inside archives based on their modification date and even ownership and permissions. Many components in Krusader are so advanced they have a name of their own. To verify that the split files are reassembled, you can also use Krusader to create and verify MD5, SHA1, Tiger and other checksums. It also has a file splitter, which can combine files as well. The selection can then be copied to a particular destination or on to the clipboard and them pasted on to any place that can access the clipboard. It can compare files in two directories, and depending on your action, the missing files are selected. When copying a file locally, Krusader will not alter its original attributes (user, group, timestamp). You can export and import user actions, and there's a whole forum on the Krusader website dedicated to ActionMan where users share their custom user actions. ![]() For example, you can set up a user action to add an OGG file into the music player's playlist, or pack a bunch of files into an ISO, or copy the selected files into the clipboard, or edit a file with superuser permissions, or just display the uptime. It helps you set up, and manage custom user actions, which can then be performed on the files in the panes. One of the best bits about Krusader is its ActionMan tool. For example, if you open an ODF document with Krusader it will invoke KOffice and display the document in a window within itself. It also uses KDE's KParts component framework, which is similar to Gnome's Bonobo, to embed external clients into a Krusader window itself. If you start it from the command line you can give it a commaseparated list of directories, which it opens in tabs on the specified pane. Krusader can open multiple tabs on either pane. You can synchronise directories over the network, or browse a remote (or local) directory in sync-mode, which keeps an eye on the changes you make to a directory in one pane and replicates them on the other pane automatically. The KIO slaves let you browse compressed archives and files over Samba, and NFS shares as well as FTP and SSH. KRename equips Krusader with a bulk rename facility KDiff, or Kompare, will compare files KGPG enables you to encrypt and decrypt files and you can email them with KEmail. KRUSADER: Designed solely for KDE, this is a very versatile file manager ![]()
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