Oh my god THANK YOU.
I have been searching for this for a year. Forum discussion usually come out to "why would you need that?" I work in media and have to look at an enormous amount of video and photo content, quick look is an absolute necessity!
KDE is an international technology team creating user-friendly free and open source software for desktop and portable computing. KDE’s software runs on GNU/Linux, BSD and other operating systems, including Windows.
If you encounter a bug, proceed to https://bugs.kde.org, check whether it has been reported.
If it hasn't, report it yourself.
PLEASE THINK CAREFULLY BEFORE POSTING HERE.
Developers do not look for reports on social media, so they will not see it and all it does is clutter up the feed.
Oh my god THANK YOU.
I have been searching for this for a year. Forum discussion usually come out to "why would you need that?" I work in media and have to look at an enormous amount of video and photo content, quick look is an absolute necessity!
Honestly one of the most frustrating responses in the tech community.
I disagree. I think it's often mistaken for derision when in reality it's a request for a better description of the use case.
It looks absolutely great and I will download it, but I have a question, what advantage does it have, for example, to use this instead, for example, to open Okular to view a PDF?
I suppose it has the advantage of not opening a complete program like an office suite to take a quick look at a file.
And thanks for considering posting on Lemmy! I have no idea if you shared it on Reddit or if you use it, but I suppose that 90% of developers prefer to share their creation there because there is more public there.
It’s much faster than opening an application. Extremely lightweight and keyboard operable. Insanely intuitive.
Select item. Hit space bar. Use arrow keys to view next or previous item. Hit space bar again to close it.
You should test out Apple’s Finder. It’s packed with features like this that save hours of people’s time every month
Look, I've never used Apple's quick look or Gnome sushi so I can't answer this question. The people here can definitely give you a better answer than me haha
After reading about a user who was looking for an alternative to Apple's Quick Look and Sushi Gnome I decided to create this program to practice with python and make someone happy. I didn't expect there were so many people with the same need.
It looks absolutely great and I will download it, but I have a question, what advantage does it have, for example, to use this instead, for example, to open Okular to view a PDF?
I think its usefulness lies in the ability to scroll between files (even of different types) with the arrow keys, plus being fast.
This looks cool, thanks!
A couple questions from looking at the repo:
instructions reference INSTALL.sh but that’s not in the source? Maybe only in the release tarball?
I added it to the repository: https://github.com/Nyre221/dolphin-quick-view/tree/main/package%20creation
does it clear the user’s entire clipboard history each time it’s run?
I made some changes and now it doesn't delete all the history, only the last thing copied (afterwards try to restore it but it doesn't work if you copied a folder or file): https://github.com/Nyre221/dolphin-quick-view/blob/main/package%20creation/quick_view_package/dolphin_quick_view_shortcut.sh
this is caused by dolphin's limitations and there's not much I can do about it.
would it make sense to package this up for PyPI, with system deps being checked for and reported from within python? If so, are you interested in pull requests?
I don't think it makes much sense for this application.
For now I'm trying to integrate the modules inside a .pyz and eliminate the use of pip: https://github.com/Nyre221/dolphin-quick-view/issues/10
Very cool. Nice work! I wonder how an implementation with KPart/C++ would look like
Thanks!
I wonder how an implementation with KPart/C++ would look like
I'm not sure what you mean, I have no experience with c++.