this post was submitted on 04 May 2025
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UX wise, GNOME is oversimplified and Plasma is overcomplicated.
Gnome: We lock down everything since youre too wtupid to handle womputers Also gnome: "oh you want right click-create file? We can't think of a more streamlined solution than navigating to the folder you already have open in nautilus using terminal, making an empty file with a terminal text editor and googling the command to save and exit empty file. Intuitive is our MO"
I love gnome workflow and simplicity but it is too locked down in nonsensical ways and it is too broken too often.
Gnome has always been like this. They started on this trend at the very beginning.
I dropped it when they released 1.0 or 1.1 as they had released another of idiotic changes that were half because "we know better" and because "fuck you, user peons". Never looked back as it's been managed the same way ever since.
Why asking for up arrow in Nautilus when you can always press alt+f8
I was searching for this a few days ago and was stunned that you aren't able to just create an empty file in the gnome file manager.
In the terminal you can use
touch file.txt
to create an empty file, but it should be possible to do this in the file manager.Oh i know i can painstakingly navigate to the correct folder with ls and cd, then google what that one command I never use is and then use man to stop the whole process and read how to use it.
It's nice to have that option for those who want to have fun with it, but it is a joke this is the intended option in gnome of all places.
You can just put a blank file in the Templates directory then it shows up in the right click menu. At least it does that on PopOS
Or, and now hear me out, you could add a New > File/Directory to the context menu.
Yes that is what you have to do. It is ridiculous that this is what you have to do.
Whatβs the point in being able to create an empty file from the file manager? You pretty much never want to actually have an empty file.
Open whatever program that can edit the document type you want (you would have it open later anyway to edit the document), make a new document, put something in it and save it. You have to do that anyway with any document type where an empty file isnβt valid data.
All done conveniently by right click and double click in the folder you're in already. No need to open another program, rummage through the menus to find "save as" or "export as" then navigate to the same location you are already in AGAIN.
Ive used txt files in windows constantly and I do not program. My archidect gf uses them constantly as well. It is very useful in a myriad of ways. Its a post it note since the other solutions for making notes, task in specific folders do not exist or suck.
For all of those you need to open an editor anyway.
Open your editor, start typing, press ctrl+s, drag the folder from the file manager to the save dialog to navigate there.
If anything, there should be a βCreate new document withβ¦β menu entry with a submenu that lets you select an editor, and when you save, the save dialog has the correct folder open. Anything, but have the editor create the document because it knows best what data to write when you do save.
A menu entry to create new empty file is a bad solution to this. Itβs not general enough, and people donβt actually want an empty file as you just demonstrated with your list.
None of those are solutions and make a widely used feature more annoying to use.
Well duh, I just came up with it on the fly instead of actually spending time thinking about what the right design would be for this. I donβt know why you expect otherwise.
I expect right click-new file.
Don't let existing workflow block a better potential design
True but the better potential design in this case is "just dont do what you do to make notes or make notes in a way more inconvenient way.
I understand you do not get how useful this simple feature is since you don't use it but you should be able to see it's potential and ease of use.
Can you give an instance of plasma being overcomplicated?
Launch System preferences, go to Internet and WiFi. Then you'll get a UI divided into three panels. The first one lists WiFi and networks, Firewall, Proxy and Other preferences; the second panel will list your connections, including Ethernet, WiFi 2.4 GHz, WiFi 5 GHz, WiFi 6GHz, Bluetooth, VPN and Loopback, your current connection will be auto selected; from the current selected connection you'll see in the third panel SSID, Mode, BSSID, Restrict devices, Cloned MAC, MTU and Visibility, and this is only one in 5 tabs of options.
I'm sure I skipped some other components in the same windows, but you see my point?
I don't agree that this is overcomplicated, how would you improve it? The simple settings are in the middle and the advanced settings are also easily accessible
if you wanted something simple and not the advanced network settings wouldn't you just use the panel applet anyway?
We don't agree, but I still think it is. I just described the first window that found overcomplicated, of course there may be options of UX which may have different arrangements. In any case, in my opinion, even the system applet is overcomplicated (for a system applet).
In this window, for example, what's the use of the first panel if you wanted to edit something in some WiFi connection? I'd replace the whole first panel with a "back" button and let the window breathe.
If you want it simple you can resize the window, make it smaller horizontally.
Exactly. Overcomplicated.