

Scroll through until you find the Utilities folder. In the menu bar, click Go and select Applications.

I’m just warning you that you may be in for a few hours of hassle, as sometimes items like graphical elements may not line up in your current desktop environment quite as well as you might have hoped. To open Terminal from your Applications folder, click your desktop to bring Finder into focus.
Open in terminal dconf install#
Because these terminal emulators are meant to work as integral parts of other desktop environments, you may have to install several libraries from the environment they specialize in to get them to work correctly. In your /path/to/filename file, substitute a path that corresponds to the file you want to edit when. If you need to modify a file that is known, just type its name followed by nano. To view the file, go to the directory where it is being stored. Konsole, for example, installs another 155 packages that come as KDE libraries, taking up an extra 146 MB of space on my drive. Selecting Ctrl+Alt+T key combinations in Terminal will allow you to access the configuration file.

Just take a moment to review the other dependencies you install alongside it. You can install, for example, Konsole from KDE Plasma by typing: sudo apt install konsole Absolutely! Just because Ubuntu uses GNOME doesn’t mean you have to use GNOME Terminal or a standalone alternative. I am trying to install a very simple color Scheme into my terminal.
