Linux Lite Forums

General => On Topic => Topic started by: alloydog on January 09, 2022, 07:40:48 AM

Title: Thunar release versions
Post by: alloydog on January 09, 2022, 07:40:48 AM
I have been looking how to have each directory to have its own view settings (as in Windows Explorer).

One thread in Reddit says: "This feature is available in 4.16"
(source: https://www.reddit.com/r/xfce/comments/llpp08/thunar_custom_view_for_specific_folders/)

So, I found that version and downloaded it.  But, before I installed it, I checked the version currently running.  It tells me it is 1.8.14.

I then decided to look for a release map and found this:
https://repology.org/project/thunar/versions

Is the version in Linux Lite (and other distros) really 3 releases behind the current, or is some other numbering scheme running to reflect something else?

Just looking for some clarity here.
Title: Re: Thunar release versions
Post by: Jerry on January 10, 2022, 07:28:44 AM
We're based off Ubuntu LTS. Better security, stability, more bug fixing.
Moved to On Topic.
Title: Re: Thunar release versions
Post by: Moltke on January 10, 2022, 09:51:15 PM
I have been looking how to have each directory to have its own view settings (as in Windows Explorer).

One thread in Reddit says: "This feature is available in 4.16"
(source: https://www.reddit.com/r/xfce/comments/llpp08/thunar_custom_view_for_specific_folders/)

So, I found that version and downloaded it.  But, before I installed it, I checked the version currently running.  It tells me it is 1.8.14.

I then decided to look for a release map and found this:
https://repology.org/project/thunar/versions

Is the version in Linux Lite (and other distros) really 3 releases behind the current, or is some other numbering scheme running to reflect something else?

Just looking for some clarity here.

That won't install due to missing dependencies. Have you checked here? https://mxlinux.org/wiki/xfce/xfce-commands-and-other-useful-stuff/#snippets There might be something you can use. I'd experiment in a VM first.