jodanlime,
@jodanlime@midwest.social avatar
Zucca,

… and tmux session open in it.

krash,

Foot

I was considering Foot, it is fast (renderwise and in interactive use) and the dev seems like an awesome person. But it doesn’t support ligatures. I’ll watch the issue and give it a shot when it’s implemented.

jodanlime,
@jodanlime@midwest.social avatar

That’s fair. I don’t think I personally use ligatures anywhere and I’m not experiencing any issues with foot after using it for a few years so I might just have to stay blissfully ignorant on this one ;)

What do you use ligatures for?

krash,

The only practical thing they provide for me is slightly better readability, and eye candy (my prompt rely on them). I like my shells functional and pretty 😁

Magister,
@Magister@lemmy.world avatar

whatever ship with the distro when I want to open a terminal…

banazir,
@banazir@lemmy.ml avatar

Konsole does everything I need it to.

TimLovesTech,
@TimLovesTech@badatbeing.social avatar

xfce4-terminal - because it’s easy to config, I like tabs, and it has good Unicode support.

pelotron,
@pelotron@midwest.social avatar

I don’t know the difference between a terminal and a terminal emulator, and at this point I’m too afraid to ask.

Lately using Foot since that’s what my distro shipped with.

squid_slime,
@squid_slime@lemmy.world avatar

What’s your DE?

pelotron,
@pelotron@midwest.social avatar

Hyprland

aes,

A terminal is the thing that looks like it might be a computer, but nobody is home, it’s just connected to a modem. Or, maybe, if you’re lucky, The Computer of your university.

A terminal emulator is, well, an emulator, so you can use a 1970’s shell, right there on your computer, just like you can emulate and play Pong or Space Invaders…

Hope that helps

GenderNeutralBro,

Realistically, no difference.

They are called emulators because “Terminal” used to mean a full-screen text interface to a mainframe. The functionality has carried on, which is why terminals behave pretty much the same on any platform. You don’t use your system’s regular text fields in a terminal emulator, for example.

troyunrau,
@troyunrau@lemmy.ca avatar

Konsole and xterm, although I haven’t had to use xterm in a while. Actually, circa 1997 I used kterm, the predecessor to konsole. ;)

Straight up Linux ttys are also quite common for me. Most old school distros still let you escape to the terminal, with CTRL-ALT-F1 or similar. I haven’t distro hopped in a long time, so I don’t know if other distros still do this.

Shdwdrgn,

I’ve always preferred Konsole because it handles several tabs pretty well and I keep a bunch open to my servers. The only issue I have with it is that it has a habit of detaching tabs if I click on one while my computer is running something heavy in the background.

CaptDust,

uxterm because fast.

Ashiette,

Konsole and Yakuake… It’s sufficient

atzanteol,

I’ve really grown to like yakuake. I always have a sorta “main terminal” where I have a tmux session going and now I do that in yakuake so it’s available on all desktops and easily put “out of the way” when I don’t need it.

infeeeee,

Black box. If you use Gnome, highly recommended.

lung,
@lung@lemmy.world avatar

It literally doesn’t matter

Rosco,

st

Trent,

Wezterm. I love some of it’s features (quick search).

bobs_monkey,

I’m partial to terminator

turbowafflz,

Kitty, but I don’t have any particular reason it’s just there and it works

NotSteve_,

Back when I was into tiling window managers and all that i’d use urxvt but now i just use gnome terminal. I can theme it nicely and it works well

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