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Xubuntu Thunar use middle click to open file?

ru flag

I am trying out Xubuntu on my second pc. I really like it so far. Works with my USB wifi better than Ubuntu Mate. But Thunar is the one possible hold back to using it on my main pc. Is there any way to use middle click to open file like Caja? It seems really odd it isn't an option because Thunar uses middle click to open a folder. Other features I like in Caja are bookmarks, displays the number of items in folders and displays files sizes when using 150%+ zoom with icon view. I installed Caja on that system and it works fine and looks better than on Ubuntu Mate. But I prefer to use native programs when possible. Thanks to all Linux developers, testers etc for the work you do. And thanks in advance if there are solutions.

Whois_me avatar
us flag
Can't you just install Caja on your new system? Otherwise, I can imagine you can edit the mouse bindings if you look for these optons in the documentation.
guiverc avatar
cn flag
You've provided no release details; Ubuntu-MATE is the MATE desktop on top of the base Ubuntu system, Xubuntu is XFCE on top of that same base Ubuntu system; so for differences relating to wifi - I'd look more at differences in your releases, or stack choices (if they were the same release; was it a LTS release which has kernel stack options & were they the same or different? Assuming you didn't change anything, the ISO used to install the system has defaults.. information you didn't provide for us). `caja` is a different program (a fork of `nautilus`) and is heavier thus more features
guiverc avatar
cn flag
Without release details we cannot really comment - Are you comparing a GTK2 `thunar` to GTK3 `caja` ... you've omitted the details that would allow comparison, however this site isn't the site for such opinion/comparisons. Xfce ported from GTK2 to GTK3 years later, so only very recent releases have more GTK3 features (but you didn't provide release details so we don't know your stack), but adding more features increases *weight* so it's avoided where possible (unless a good % of users request it). Your question hasn't ruled out user-differences (ie. Ubuntu base stack differences)
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