• Jediwan@lemy.lol
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    2 months ago

    So many comments here saying you don’t need the terminal for full functionality… What Distro are you people using??? How do you install programs not in the “software center” and how do you edit config files? How do you configure a network share? I don’t really think you guys are thinking this through.

    For any use-cases beyond a very limited chromebook-like functionality, Linux is absolutely not fully usable without access to the terminal.

    • TheMonkeyLord@sopuli.xyz
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      2 months ago

      Any modern distro.

      There are GUI methods for adding repositories to every major software center to my knowledge, and it isn’t very hard.

      Kate, and other modern file editors are more than equipped to handle some config files, that’s probably the simplest thing ever.

      There are multiple GUI front ends for samba.

      Don’t comment on the usability of Linux GUI if you haven’t even tried in the last 20 years like seriously

      • Jediwan@lemy.lol
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        2 months ago

        Any modern distro.

        I don’t suppose you could give the name of a distro that achieves full functionality purely in the GUI?

    • Jediwan@lemy.lol
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      2 months ago

      In your opinion what makes a terminal program “more useful” than a GUI program with the exact same functionality? Genuinely curious because it’s a perspective I cannot wrap my brain around lol

    • bitfucker@programming.dev
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      2 months ago

      You may be out of touch with people that are used to GUI. For example, during the first installation of linux distro after the user is landed on their DE, as far as I know, no distro ever curates the terminal to them. Like “this is the menu”, “this is the terminal emulator”, and even after the user managed to open the terminal, it is not obvious what to do next as there is only text prompt. Remember, users using GUI usually encounter text prompts with some hint (username, comment, email). Meanwhile the terminal has nothing. Suddenly you see the user you are logged in as and a blinking cursor. After that, how do you know what apps are installed? What commands can you call? Typing help doesn’t always help on every distro. Again, remember, users using GUI will see what apps are installed usually using a menu of some sort. There is a lot of friction coming from GUI if you have never encountered CLI before. Heck, I bet some people have never installed an application outside from an app store or their commissioned device. Even a file explorer concept is foreign to some.