On Thu, Jun 17, 2004 at 07:34:41AM +0300, Micha Feigin wrote: > > And I believe gnome-terminal gives you only partial, if any integration > with gnome as it uses its own settings. Its only advantage is that it > looks like gnome. > > > I recommend xterm or rxvt. You can change the font with the -font > > option. There are plenty of other useful options such as storing x > > number of lines for scrolling, and disabling scrollbars and using the > > keyboard/mouse wheel.
I found gnome-terminal good-looking and handling unicode and unusual ASCII "right out of the box," and didn't want to fuss with learning xterm, since gnome-termnal is "good enough." I realized Konsole and gnome-terminal are super-heavy-weight apps for terminals. I also like the deep integration with the Gnome clipboard, which sometimes produces different results than middle mouse button. Sometimes I'll use tabs for multiple sessions, although I usually find 4 is enough. Each of the 4 windows serves a purpose: one is 80x25, one is 80x40, one is 95x25, one is 95x40. If I want linewraps correct I'll use one of the 80 width ones, If I need to read a lot of text I'll use one of the 40 height ones. A lot of times I'll Tab doc a Kate window in the large square for editing code, maybe a Firefox window in another square for reading documentation, and use one square for building and another for debugging. I like the 4 square approach, and I find that more than 2 desktops make me stop and think when I mouse wheel between them. That's what I like so much about Linux/GTK/Debian/Firefox: it lets me work the way *I* want, even if it suits no one else. Makes *me* happy. -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]