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Summary
- Your Prior Experience is Useful
- How Files and Folders Displayed
- Mouse Movements
- Keyboard Movements
- Finding Your Files and Folders
- Go To and Go Back
- Finding Your Programs
- Selecting, Dragging, Opening
- Arranging, Sorting
- Enabling Detailed View
- Searching
- Making Bookmarks
- Making Shortcuts
- Saving and Opening
- End Words
Say Hello to Your Prior Experience
Before going into your data, you need to know how to use Debian KDE's user interface in brief. With GUI system, touching data means touching user interface. Fortunately, Debian KDE is very similar to Microsoft Windows in a way of its appearance structure and how your clicks control it, so your previous experience will need no changes as they are useful here. The only thing you need to be aware of is single-click here replaces double-click.
How Files and Folders Displayed
No different to your previous OS, here, every file named with a file name ended with an extension, for example mypicture.jpeg for a picture file and cityjourney.mp4 for a video file. Every directory (also called folder) symbolized by blue box without any extension on its name.
Mouse Movements
Debian KDE 9.5.0 "Stretch" gives these movements:
- (*) Single-click: run program, open file, open folder
- Hover: show the ' + ' button on file or folder
- Click on ' + ' button: select file, select folder
- Double-click: (none)
- Right-click: show context-menu
- Drag-and-drop: copy and paste file or folder, move icon position
Keyboard Movements
- Alt+F4: close program
- Super: open/close start menu
- Alt+Tab: switch between active programs
- Ctrl+T: open new tab
- F2: rename
- F1: help
- F5: refresh
- Del: remove a file or a folder to Trash Bin ("Recycle Bin")
- Shift+Del: remove a file or a folder permanently
- PrintScreen: take a picture of screen
- Super+PrintScreen: take a picture of current window
Knowing these information, now is the time to go dive to your files.
1. Finding Your Folders and Files
Click the blue folder icon (that's Dolphin, your file manager, your life partner). Here you will see your filesystem starting from your private folder (called "Home"). Opening a folder is enough with single-click, not double.
2. Go To and Go Back
Press Ctrl+L and type / to see your whole Debian KDE system.
Press Ctrl+L and type /usr/share/wallpapers/ to see your Debian KDE wallpaper pictures.
Press Ctrl+L and type /usr/bin/ to see all your installed programs in Debian KDE.
Press Home logo to go back to your Home directory. If your username is debianman, for example, then your Home directory should be /home/debianman/.
Press left arrow button to Go Back one step.
3. Finding Your Programs
For this purpose, the easiest one is by opening the start menu. You can click the menu button to reveal the menu, and, fortunately, you can also press Super key just like in your previous OS.
4. Selecting, Dragging, Opening
Hover your mouse cursor to any folder you will see a ' + ' button showing. Click the ' + ' button you select that folder. That's selecting on Debian KDE.
Click once, not twice, a folder. That opens the folder.
Click once, not twice, a picture. That opens the picture.
Click once, not twice, a video. That plays the video.
Click and hold a file, move your mouse cursor, and release it, and select Copy Here. A little bit different, but that's how drag-and-drop on Debian KDE works.
5. Arranging, Sorting, Grouping
You may change between tree and thumbnails styles. Simply press Ctrl+1 or Ctrl+2; or click first and third button on the toolbar. Which one do you prefer?
You can sort your files according to Newest by selecting Sort By > Modified > Descending. Other categories are available as well.
You can group your files! Grouping means arranging files under categories with a horizontal line on each group. See this example.
6. Enabling Detailed View
With detailed view mode (Ctrl+3) you see more information with same view space. Many people love this mode much better than thumbnails view mode. If you activated it, you can do sorting and arranging much more faster and better. Not to mention, the information displayed are easier to read as it's organized top-down with tree hierarchy. See below.
7. Searching
Press Ctrl+F to Find (Search) files or folders. Debian KDE is very quick in this purpose and every search result displayed immediately without waiting all results finished (called "incremental search").
8. Making Quick Access
Quick access is called bookmark. You can drag-and-drop folders you love the most to left panel so you can quickly go to them. No need to manually browsing them anymore. See below.
9. Making Desktop Shortcuts
Debian KDE supports desktop shortcuts for files, folders, as well as programs. You can drag-and-drop items from start menu, or, files from Dolphin File Manager, by choosing Link Here every time asked. If you cannot do this, see more info below.
10. Saving and Opening Files
End Words
to be continued...
This article is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.