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4.7 star rating
0
What is the best alternative to Guake?
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Terminology
All
13
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
5
Top
Con
Configuration is sometimes complicated and non-obvious
There's a "Settings" menu for configuration, but more options there would make it easier. Downloading themes and extensions from the official repo would be a big plus.
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Pro
Scalable fonts
Font size in Terminology automatically scales according to window size. When you resize the window, so does the text.
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Top
Con
No True-Color support
Not able to display a modern full range of colors, yet.
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Top
Pro
Looks smashing
Terminals are often very dull looks wise, not so with terminology.
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Top
Con
Scrollback is completely nroken
Scrolling back the emulator inserts random lines from other places in the scrollback buffer in between the actuall output lines. Thus it is impossible to see a correct copy of the previous output.
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Pro
In-terminal video, picture and thumbnail support
Thumbnails, pictures, and videos can all be rendered in-terminal, based on the directory listing or mouse interactions. For instance, using "ls" on a picture folder will produce a list of thumbnails instead of only the filenames.
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Con
No scrollbar
The lack of scrollbar in Terminology makes navigation difficult. But you can use keys for it.
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Pro
Splitable
You can split windows, like in terminator.
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Top
Con
Too many bells and whistles
Some people feel that Terminology has too many features that are not suited for a terminal, but for a window manager instead. For instance, viewing thumbnails, watching videos and gifs, and other similarly flashy things just feel like eye candy and should not be part of a terminal emulator.
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Pro
Visually customizable
It is very customizable in every aspect of the visual options.
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Top
Pro
Integrates well with Enlightenment WM
Terminology is part of the Enlightenment WM packages. As such, it integrates really well with Enlightenment and other tools in the package.
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Top
Pro
Block copy
You can copy text in blocks.
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Top
Pro
Copyfree licensing
Terminology uses the Simplified BSD License. As it is a copyfree license, it tends to minimize license incompatibilities, legal compliance requirements, and various other complexities that may make it difficult to understand certain licenses.
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106
20
Alacritty
All
11
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
3
Specs
Top
Pro
Blazing fast rendering with GPU-accelerated
Written in Rust with a philosophy focusing on speed and simplicity, Alacritty is one of the fastest terminal emulators out there.
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Top
Con
Cannot into ligatures
Alacritty does not support ligatures in Fira Code, Iosevka etc.
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Top
Pro
Looks good
Alacritty looks very slick on Linux, especially with GNOME or i3.
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Top
Con
Unreliable Font Rendering
Like a box of chocolate you never know what you're going to get.
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Top
Pro
Simple configuration
The configuration file is very well made and easy to use. You can fine tune your preferences to perfection in a matter of minutes.
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Top
Con
Sacrifices basic features for raw performance
The Suzuki GSXR of terminals. Or your ditzy, blonde high school cheerleader; fast and pretty but not a lot going on under the hood. Eschews a negative developmental philosophy towards including said functionality, with the official reason cited in project documentation as "Not within the realm of a terminal emulator" and ostensibly, "best left up to other tools such as terminal multiplexers" [such as screen or tmux]. Which is unfortunate when you factor in speed against terminal with the functionality built in vs their reliance on 3rd party tools: tmux on alacritty: 'find /usr' time: 3.234s, cpu: 72% tmux on konsole: find /usr' time: 1.777s, cpu: 96% See issue here.
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Top
Pro
Comprehensive font options
Alacritty can be configured to adjust line spacing (height), letter spacing (width), and individual character horizontal/vertical positions.
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Top
Pro
Has support for image previews in w3m and ranger
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Pro
Has text ref-low when window is resized
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Top
Pro
Fast and simple but with true color support
It's simple and fast like xterm or urxvt but with truecolor support which is a big plus if you use a terminal based code editor. Basically Alacritty has all the features you need and nothing you don't (if you're using tmux for multiplexing).
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Specs
Font Ligatures:
No
Configurable:
Yes, via automatically reloading YAML configuration file
GPU Acceleration:
Yes
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Experiences
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219
37
Tilda
All
6
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Easily accessible drop-down
The drop-down function in Tilda does not get in the way and can be accessed at any time with a keyboard shortcut.
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Top
Con
Contains some annoying bugs
Tilda can be buggy at times. For example, if you don't close it before shutdown, it may prompt you to reconfigure it all over again on the next boot.
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Top
Pro
Highly customizable
There are tons of customizations you can make: from adding colors to text, turning backgrounds transparent, setting the size to be "maximized", toggling scrollbar on and off, adjusting orientation/borders/animation, etc.
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Pro
Few dependencies
Tilda is a very minimal and lean terminal emulator. It requires very few dependencies and the amount of resources needed is small.
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Top
Pro
Supports transparency
You can monitor information displayed by applications under Tilda.
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Pro
Tabs support
Tilda supports tabs. By default: to open a new tab press Ctrl + Shift + t. To move through them: Ctrl + PgUp/PgDn.
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42
4
Sakura
All
10
Experiences
Pros
8
Cons
2
Top
Pro
Lightweight
Sakura has very few dependencies, it's very lightweight, and great if your computer does not have many resources.
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Top
Con
libvte/gtk
It has gnome dependencies.
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Top
Pro
True colour support
Supports full 24-bit color.
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Top
Con
Doesn't provide many configuration options
Sakura does not have any advanced configuration capabilities.
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Top
Pro
Great unicode support
Even shows combining chars correctly.
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Top
Pro
Few dependencies
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Top
Pro
Starts quickly even on lower-end machines
Sakura's quick start-up time becomes noticeable with lower-end machine's such as Eeepc 1015PX (Intel Atom 1.6 Ghz and 2 GB of RAM).
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Top
Pro
Tab support
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Top
Pro
Easy zoom
Sakura supports zooming through keyboard keys (Ctrl+'+' to zoom in and Ctrl+'-' to zoom out).
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Top
Pro
Ready for wayland
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55
6
Xfce4 terminal
All
13
Experiences
Pros
7
Cons
6
Top
Pro
Good for systems with low specs
Like other applications included in the Xfce package, this terminal emulator is very lightweight and doesn't require many resources to run. This makes it perfect for systems that have low specs.
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Top
Con
Cannot set text color for character under cursor to background color
Suppose you have a dark background with a light cursor and light foreground color: the light cursor will cover up whatever character it is on, so that you cannot read it. There is no option to set the foreground color for the character under the cursor to what is normally the background color. Such an option would allow you to read the character under the cursor.
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Top
Pro
True transparency
You can set the transparency of the Xfce4 terminal on any amount you want, out of the box.
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Top
Con
Execution in xfce4-terminal - e mode is not always functional
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Top
Pro
Tabs support
Xfce4 fully supports tabs and tab-based navigation.
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Top
Con
Resizing text resizes window
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Top
Pro
Almost everything is customizable
You can configure size, color, background, etc.
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Top
Con
No profiles
There's no profiles or profile-based customization in Xfce-terminal.
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Top
Pro
Composition effects
Xfce4 terminal takes advantage of xfce composition effects.
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Top
Con
Can't scroll on spamming text
When text generates too fast, you can't scroll it, so you just can't read anything in such moments.
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Top
Pro
Fast rendering
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Top
Con
Does not support sixel images
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Top
Pro
Can be switched to a drop-down terminal
You can configure the Xfce-terminal to act as a dropdown terminal if you want, which makes for greater ease of use.
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134
18
Tilix
All
22
Experiences
Pros
18
Cons
4
Top
Pro
Multiple sessions inside a single window
In addition to tiling, Tilix supports placing separate sessions in tabs or switching from one to another through a sidebar.
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Top
Con
Unmaintained
Bugs and pull requests are not processed.
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Top
Pro
Tiling makes for ease of use
The user can split terminals horizontally or vertically, according to their needs or preferences.
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Top
Con
No font ligatures
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Top
Pro
Integrates nicely into GNOME 3
Tilix follows the GNOME Human Interface Guidelines and uses the UI patterns of this desktop environment.
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Top
Con
Takes a bit more memory than Gnome terminal
Would've expected this to be more lightweight.
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Top
Pro
Good alternative to Terminator
Tiling and ability to type into multiple terminals simultaneously is Terminator's 2 most significant features. Tilix has them as well.
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Top
Con
Heavyweight
Tilix has quite a lot of dependencies and takes ~100MB of RAM when running.
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Top
Pro
Configurable shortcuts
Many actions in Tilix can be triggered with configurable shortcuts.
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Top
Pro
GNOME Human Interface Guidelines
Tilix follows GNOME HIG whereas gnome-terminal doesn't. GNOME should use Tilix as their default terminal.
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Top
Pro
Transparent background
Unlike the standard GNOME Terminal, Tilix supports configurable background transparency.
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Top
Pro
Fancy looks
Tilix has that new GNOME look, with a HeaderBar. It can also be disabled.
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Top
Pro
Able to write into multiple terminals simultaneously
Inside a session, you can select multiple terminals, which will receive the same input simultaneously.
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Top
Pro
Can be used as a drop-down terminal
The new 1.30 version of Tilix supports a quake mode enabling it to work as a drop-down terminal.
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Top
Pro
Extremely fast
As fast as gnome-terminal, if not faster.
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Top
Pro
Copy on select
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Top
Pro
Faster than Gnome Terminal
When running commands it feels snappier.
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Top
Pro
Easy
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Top
Pro
Copy as HTML
You can copy text from the terminal as HTML for embedding in web settings.
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Top
Pro
Lightweight
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Top
Pro
Solarized themes built-in
Great support for solarized color schemes, and no setup is involved.
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Top
Pro
Terminus can notify you about finished tasks and perform actions based on terminal output
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Experiences
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145
20
Konsole
All
19
Experiences
Pros
13
Cons
6
Top
Pro
Directory and SSH bookmarking
Konsole can bookmark ssh and telnet sessions, directories, and it can open tabs in a folder for easy access.
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Top
Con
KDE Library dependencies
While not an issue if using KDE, when trying to use this terminal in other desktop environments or window managers, there will be a large amount of dependencies tied to the app, making for a large install size. For those trying to keep their desktop lean, this may be an issue.
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Top
Pro
Supports split-view
Konsole supports split-view which splits the window into two (or more) konsole instances. This is very useful for people who work a lot on the terminal and don't want to spend time navigating between different windows or tabs.
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Top
Con
Uses a lot of memory
Although it's very fast, konsole has to use a lot of resources in return. It may use up to 30 MB per instance, depending on the number of tabs and the task at hand.
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Top
Pro
True color and Smooth font
Konsole supports true color and smooth font. This made konsole more fanstatic than other terminal emulators.
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Top
Con
No good support for powerline character even with patched fonts
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Top
Pro
Embeddable into the desktop
Konsole can be embedded into desktop so it's always easily accessible, but not in the way of other windows.
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Top
Con
Can mess terminal keybinds
Most the of the time, the terminal keybinds are just ignored to obey the kde keybinds. Can be configured though.
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Top
Pro
Export of output in plain text or HTML format
By going to file > save output, you can send all screen output to a text file.
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Top
Con
Lack of DECSCUSR support
Konsole don't allow changing the cursor shape with extended DECSCUSR sequences, using instead the temporary-profile hack. This causes pain when working in (neo)vim inside Konsole.
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Top
Pro
Support in Dolphin file manager
Konsole can be accessed by pressing F4 in Dolphin, which is convenient for when the user needs to open the terminal in a particular spot of the file structure.
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Top
Con
No support for double-width characters
Konsole no supports double width characters. For powerline users, you need to add a space after powerline glyph.
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Top
Pro
Supports font ligature
Most terminals in Linux don't support font ligature, while many modern fonts such as PragmataPro or Fira Code already have decent coverage of font ligature. Support for font ligature makes user experience and font management much easier (i.e. you don't need to keep two copies of the same font just to use in the console)
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Top
Pro
Helps to identify tabs using custom icons
Users can associate each bookmark or SSH session with a custom icon, thus giving a visual hint to quickly identify a tab when a lot of tabs are open.
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Top
Pro
Supports advanced color schemes
In particular solarized.
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Top
Pro
Notification alerts about activity in a terminal
Konsole can monitor activities and notify the user through system notifications when a certain activity happens. This is a very customizable feature too: you can write scripts that can use this feature and notify you for whatever you want.
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Top
Pro
Exceptionally fast
Konsole is usually very fast. It boots up very quickly and takes less than a second (averages to 0.25-0.59 seconds) to display files of up to 600 MB.
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Pro
Customize and save profiles
Profiles containing different settings can be created, saved, and loaded. Color schemes, window transparency, scroll bar, key bindings, start-up commands, window border, and menu bar can all be customized according to the user's needs.
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Top
Pro
Allows CTRL-SHIFT-c/v within WSL Ubuntu as well
Good menu to customize.
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Experiences
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25
Yakuake
All
19
Experiences
Pros
13
Cons
6
Top
Pro
Drop-down terminal makes for ease of use
Yakuake is a drop-down terminal. This means that you can press, for example, F12, and it slides downward from the top edge of the screen. After you are done with it, you can then hit F12 again and it slides back on top.
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Top
Con
Theming options are very limited, Does not integrate naturally with the DE
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Top
Pro
Very customizable
Almost everything in Yakuake is customizable: from split view, fullscreen mode, configurable dimensions, to animation speed and keybindings.
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Top
Con
KDE Library dependencies
While not an issue if using KDE, when trying to use this terminal in other desktop environments or window managers, there will be a large amount of dependencies tied to the app. This makes for a large install size. For those trying to keep their desktop lean, this may be an issue.
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Top
Pro
Split layout
You can easily split any tab into different windows and run several commands at the same time then monitor and change them with ease. You won't find this feature in guake or tilda!
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Top
Con
No sessions support
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Top
Pro
Tabs support
Yakuake supports tabs, while working with several tabs is very easy. By default: to open a new tab press Ctrl + Shift + t. To move through them: Shift + left/right arrow.
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Top
Con
No Windows support
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Top
Pro
Monitor for activity/silence
When an activity is let working (e.g.: compiling some source or upgrading some system), and you forgot it, a nice popup and sound will alert you when the command prompt returned on that term.
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Top
Con
Slow
Is not slow at all. I have yakuake installed in all my computers (8) and it launches immediatly after pressing the hotkey. Must be a error from yourt side. Yakuake has started to get really slow with the latest updates: it takes up to 3 seconds to start up after you have clicked the assigned hotkey.
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Pro
Unlimited scroll history
You can scroll, inside the same terminal session, infinitely, so no command should be lost, even it isn't stored yet on history.
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Top
Con
Heavy
Not true at all. I from far one of the lightiest graphical terminals out there. Mine is 14MB with a bunch of split views and 4 tabs at the moment of writing this.
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Pro
Lightweight
Opens at 40MB and stays below 100MB with some tabs splitted in four each. So if you need to have many terminals emulators opened in your desktop environment, is the a very light solution for all the features it includes.
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Pro
Quick search support
Search directly in your favourite search engine just by selecting something and right clicking. It will open the browser result page.
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Pro
Quick move through splits and tabs
You can move through terminals with Ctrl+Shift+Cursors or tabs with Shift+Cursor keys, so no need to touch you mouse or pad, making working with terms even faster.
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Pro
Can be scripted using qdbus
Window composition and commands inside can be scripted using qdbus. You can make desktop shortcuts to automatically create tabs, split windows and connect to ssh sessions or launch monitoring programms. Very useful.
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Pro
Wayland support
As the entire Plasma Desktop, yakuake already has full support for Wayland.
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Pro
Save output as text
You can save the output of a terminal directly to a text file, to work properly with it later.
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Pro
Enhanced focused terminal
You can configure yakuake to show a visual altert when you change the terminal. So even if you have many splittings and you don't use the mouse to change between them, you can easily see where you are at any moment.
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Experiences
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117
20
rxvt-unicode
All
20
Experiences
Pros
11
Cons
9
Top
Pro
Low memory usage
Rxvt-unicode uses very little memory and takes a lightweight approach without losing many important functionalities. A single instance of urxvt takes about 6.5MB-8MB of RAM.
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Top
Con
Unicode characters that are too wide are blanked instead of clipped
If a character in a backup font is wider than the base font, urxvt substitutes the non-displayable character. A large letter space will show the wide characters, but the result is not reasonably spaced. There is a patch from 2014 that the urxvt maintainer will not merge.
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Top
Pro
Can be daemonized to reduce resource usage
For those who want to lower their system's resource usage, rxvt-unicode allows for daemonization. This way you can run several instances of urxvt inside a single process.
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Con
Requires work to look acceptable
Out of the box, rxvt-unicode is not too pleasant to look at. Some understanding of Xresources is required for updating its appearance. That being said, the experience of customizing it can be very rewarding.
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Pro
Supports terminal transparency
Changing the transparency of the terminal is allowed for in rxvt-unicode. This not only makes for eye candy but is also good for GUI usability.
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Top
Con
Requires work to configure useful functionality (clickable URL's, font scaling, tabs)
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Pro
Minimum dependencies and simple text config
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Con
In daemon mode you can lose all your terminals
Because of sharing the same process terminal windows cannot be killed without sacrificing all other open windows. That becomes even more dangerous if you use multiple graphical managers without overriding socket with RXVT_SOCKET.
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Pro
Supports multiple font types
Multiple font types can be displayed flawlessly in rxvt-unicode.
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Con
Unicode rendering is buggy
There are a few references to urxvt's buggy rendering, such as unicode combining characters, which bled through during scrolling.
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Pro
Handles bold text colour properly
Displays characters with text attribute bold actually as bold glyphs.
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Con
Bloated
Exists because Xterm is complete trash. Although it has a lot of features, you will most likely never use them all.
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Pro
High performance
Rxvt-unicode is much faster than most alternatives.
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Con
No support yet for 24-bit "True Color"
Though this is still not available, you can download the patched version for 24bit, here.
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Pro
Unicode support
International language support is provided through Unicode.
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Con
Font size cannot be changed on the fly with the mousewheel
Sometimes you may need to enlarge the font to improve readability, or shrink it to have more real estate and "hawk's eye" view of data. In rxvt you need to change the configuration file or use these commands: $ function fontsize {printf '\33]50;%s%d\007' "xft:Dejavu Sans Mono:size=$1::antialias=false"} $ fontsize 22
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Pro
Proper wrapping support
During selection and pasting wrapped text doesn't break into lines at place of wrapping.
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Con
No option to have a "reverse color" cursor
While you can choose the color of the cursor and the character under the cursor, there's no automatic "reverse color" for the cursor. This makes it impossible to use rxvt-unicode if you have a light background terminal and a dark background editor.
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Pro
Fast text rendering
Rxvt-unicode has very fast text rendering, being able to render hundreds of MB of text in a very short time.
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Pro
Built-in Perl interpreter
It has a built-in Perl interpreter, meaning that no install is needed. Simply run urxvtperl.
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56
Terminator
All
31
Experiences
Pros
19
Cons
12
Top
Pro
Multiple terminal panes to suit user's needs
It is possible to split the terminal window into several areas and you can re-size them as needed. Multiple windows and tabs are also supported.
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Con
Heavyweight
Due to its many features, Terminator can be a bit heavyweight and with lots of dependencies. This makes it unsuitable for old machines or computers with low resources.
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Pro
Highly customizable
You can change the size, color, and give different shapes to the terminal. You can also save multiple layouts and profiles via the GUI preferences editor.
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Con
Poor text search
Text search in Terminator does not highlight matching patterns when found. It just shows the row containing one of the matching patterns at the top of the terminal. This way text search is still usable, but not the best.
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Pro
Can type on multiple grouped terminals simultaneously
You can type at the same time on any number of arbitrarily grouped terminals. (Or all at once, or only the focussed, all switchable with a shortcut or menu item).
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Con
Starting up can be slow
Terminator can be pretty slow (as far as terminals go) when first starting up.
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Pro
Extendable functionality through plugins
Terminator functionality can be extended via plugins. Examples of this include: Custom commands URL handlers (on top of common ones) for apt, launchpad, maven Logging output to file
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Con
Buggy and crashy
Crashes and closes many times a day when using split (and unsplit) shortcuts. The developers don't accept a bug report if isn't critical or not easy to reproduce.
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Pro
Save and launch layouts of terminals
Terminator allows the user to save, configure, and launch arrangements of windows, tabs, and terminals.
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Con
Bug - unable enter text after a while
A while after having a terminal window open, entering text is impossible. The terminal just sits there, not frozen, but with an empty command line.
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Pro
Configurable scrollback buffer
The scrollback lines can be set to a preferred value, or set to infinite scrollback.
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Con
Unable to specify startup window dimensions
Some users like their terminal windows to be a particular number of characters wide and tall. The default is 80x24 but some prefer something larger. Manually resizing every new instance gets old fast.
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Pro
Can act as a drop-down terminal
If you want to use Terminator as a drop-down terminal, you can do so by editing the config file and set whichever key you want to use as a trigger.
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Con
Multiple line copy and paste does not work correctly.
If an output line wraps onto two lines copying and pasting it will insert a line break character between the two lines even though the was no line break in the original output. Thus it is impossible to copy/paste lines longer than the terminal width.
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Pro
Configurable shortcuts
Many actions in Terminator can be triggered with configurable shortcuts.
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Con
Updating terminal layouts via the preferences window is hard
It's easy to save & name your current layout, but it's hard to edit it. Especially when you use custom startup commands per pane.
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Pro
Both true and fake transparency
If you have a compositor, you can use true transparency. You can also have a fake transparency where an image can be used as a fake desktop. Both of these can be tinted with the background color too.
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Con
It uses the GTK VTE widget which does not support newest features
Newer and, admittedly, non-standard terminal features can't be used in Terminator.
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Pro
Desktop notifications on silence and/or activity
There is a standard notification pop-up that appears if a terminal is silent for a configurable period, or if it has new activity.
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Con
Cannot disable zooming
The ctrl + mouse scroll key binding can't be disabled.
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Pro
Familiar to GNOME-Terminal users
When not constrained by it's own general principles and unique features, Terminator tries to follow the GNOME-Terminal way of doing things.
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Con
Redundant
Just use tmux instead.
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Pro
Zoom and Maximize a single terminal for aiding focus
You can zoom (font size increases) or maximize (font size does not increase) a single terminal to fill the whole window with a shortcut. All the other terminals remain open, they are just hidden from sight, and everything is restored by repeating the shortcut.
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Con
Ugly looking
The interface and the preferences window look outdated.
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Pro
Comes with an extensive manual
Every single aspect of Terminator is exhaustively documented, and can be quickly opened with the common shortcut F1 (which is configurable, of course).
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Pro
User-friendly
Terminator has tabs, drag and drop re-ordering of terminals, and lots of keyboard shortcuts to help the user. It also has an extensive preferences window, or if you have to, a plain text config file.
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Pro
Tries to reduce resource usage through DBus
Unless this option is disabled (it's enabled by default), Terminator will only run the first instance as a process. And when it's run again, the DBus server will simply open a new window using the old process. This helps a lot with reducing resource usage.
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Pro
Can save logs
Terminator has a really helpful functionality that lets the user start/stop a logger in order to save the text written in the shell into a file. In order to do this, the user needs to turn on the logging plugin in the plugin settings, and then a "start logger" menu item will appear in a right click menu when using the terminal. The user is also able to pick the path they would like the logs saved to when turning the plugin on.
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Pro
Content reflow when a terminal is resized
If you have long lines of text inside a terminal and then you change the size of the terminal, the text will also automatically update according to the new size.
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Pro
Can be driven by a script through DBus
Some activities can be scripted using a tool called remotinator which uses the DBus interface to command the application to perform a limited set of tasks.
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Pro
Tilix Config is easy and flexible
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44
Gnome Terminal
All
22
Experiences
Pros
13
Cons
8
Specs
Top
Pro
Good integration with other GNOME-Shell apps
Gnome Terminal integrates well into Gnome Desktop, as well as the rest of the core Gnome Shell apps.
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Con
No background transparency
While this used to be a good option, background transparency has been removed.
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Pro
Exceptionally fast
The Gnome Terminal is usually very fast. It boots up very quickly and takes less than a second (averages to 0.25-0.59 seconds) to display files of up to 600 MB.
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Con
Gnome library dependencies
While not an issue if using Gnome, when trying to use this terminal in other desktop environments or window managers there will be a large amount of dependencies tied to the app making for a large install size. For those trying to keep their desktop lean this may be an issue.
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Pro
Support for tabs
Gnome Terminal allows for the use of tabs by right clicking in the terminal window and selecting open new tab or by pressing Ctrl+Shift+t by default.
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Con
Font rendering doesn't look good
it seems that everything is fatter per default.
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Pro
Supports scrolling
You can scroll up and down in Gnome terminal. And if you wish to do so, you can also hide the scrollbar.
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Con
Heavyweight
To achieve a large amount of speed, Gnome Terminal has to use a relatively large amount of memory to run. It may eat up to 15-30 MB per instance, depending on the task it's doing.
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Pro
Solarized colors
Gnome Terminal comes with a solarized colorscheme installed and ready to use.
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Con
No tab names
Since Gnome 3, the feature for manual renaming of tabs was reaped off.
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Pro
Content re-flow when window is resized
When using the GNOME Terminal, if you have long lines of text inside it and then you change the window, the text will also automatically update according to the new window size.
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Con
Doesn't support font ligature still in 2019
gnome-terminal uses vte for its terminal emulator, and vte simply doesn't support font ligature (yes, it's 2019). This is what its maintainer thinks about it. He really thinks supporting font ligature breaks terminal's grid, like he doesn't understand a font that's monospace is a monospace no matter if it has ligature or not.
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Pro
Notifications upon command completion
This isn't in the current release but in development versions you get notifications when commands are complete. This is great for long-running commands, relieving you from continuously checking to see if your command is done.
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Con
Incomplete vt handling due to using libvte
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Pro
Configurable keybindings
Configurable key bindings can be used for copy-paste, sending SIGINT, switching tabs, and so on.
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Con
Restrictive license
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Pro
Transparency
We can change the alpha canal and see through the terminal.
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Pro
Open Source
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Pro
Drop-down support
Drop-down functionality can be added to Gnome Terminal via an extension.
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Pro
Clever memory management
Multiple terminals are managed from one gnome-terminal instance that takes up about 45 MB. Adding on other instances (with 10k lines of used buffer), each terminal requires about 16 MB of memory.
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Pro
Getting better and better over time
Tilix used to surpass gnome-terminal but right now they are both the best options unless you have special needs.
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Specs
License:
GPLv3+
Source repository:
https://gitlab.gnome.org/GNOME/gnome-terminal
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128
27
kitty
All
5
Experiences
Pros
5
Top
Pro
Extensible Kitten framework
Supports plugins to add features one at a time for those who need them. Examples include Unicode input and side-by-side diffs.
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Top
Pro
Window tiling
Very elegant keyboard shortcuts for creating and navigating between tiled terminals within each tab with no appreciable lag.
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Pro
Tabs for multiple instances
Operate several terminals from one window using the tabs feature, allowing you to make simultaneous connections to different remote hosts.
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Pro
Scrollback buffer viewer
Allows for viewing the scrollback buffer in an external pager of your choice ('less' by default, with support for 'more' and 'most'), a huge benefit for turning actions taken in a live terminal session into a script for efficiency or dissemination or collaborating on workflows.
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Pro
Controlled and configured from the shell prompt within the program itself
No graphical menus to clutter the screen saves system resources and time once you learn that all those options are still available from the command line within the app.
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125
27
WezTerm
All
7
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Specs
Top
Pro
Supports multiple windows, tabs, splits/panes
tmux-like functionality with native UI even on Windows systems allows managing multiple terminal sessions how you like.
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Con
Lua learning curve for config
The only reason it would be difficult to recommend is that it's for experienced programmers.
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Pro
Looks good
Highly customizable appearance and comes with over 240 built-in color schemes.
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Pro
Open Source and Free
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Pro
Supports font ligatures and stylistic sets
Ships with JetBrains Mono, a modern programmers font, so that you can enjoy modern typographical features such as contextual ligatures and font variations/stylistic sets in your terminal environment.
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Pro
GPU Accelerated
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Specs
Font Ligatures:
Yes, with control over shaping and stylistic sets
GPU Acceleration:
Yes
Configurable:
Lua based live reloading configuration
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Experiences
Free
23
7
LXTerminal
All
7
Experiences
Pros
6
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Lightweight
LXTerm is the official terminal for the LXDE desktop environment, which is a very light DE in itself. So LXTerminal is a very good choice for lower-end systems.
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Con
Not very customizable
LXTerminal, like XTerminal and UXTerminal, is not very customizable and extendable (at least not as much as other terminal emulators).
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Top
Pro
Multiple tabs support
LXTerminal supports working with multiple tabs and tab-based navigation.
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Top
Pro
Built-in transparency
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Top
Pro
Customizable keyboard shortcuts
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Pro
Lighhtweight and ticks most boxes.
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Pro
Customize-able background/foreground colors
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Experiences
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22
10
hyper
All
8
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
6
Top
Con
Made with Electron
It uses a considerable amount of resources, compared to other offerings.
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Pro
Cross-platform due to electron browser-based foundation
Although not Windows-friendly. But nobody uses Windows terminal anyway.
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Con
Not as cross platform as advertised
Most features only work on Mac OS.
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Pro
Built on electron, supports split panels and plugins
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Con
Incorrect rendering
Terminal window has visual artifacts.
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Con
No configuration UI; all options must be set via JSON
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Con
Still maturing as of December 2016
Folks noticed some issues in the 1.0 release cited here.
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Top
Con
Difficult to find information about it, because of the confusion with hyperterminal
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Experiences
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89
40
QTerminal
All
4
Experiences
Pros
2
Cons
2
Top
Con
Window resize
Resizing the window does not resize the contents, like rxvt-unicode does.
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Top
Pro
Font ligatures
QTerminal support font ligatures found in fonts like FiraCode.
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Top
Con
Strange default paste action
When pasting into QTerminal, one has to be careful as it assumes immediate execution.
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Pro
Lightweight
Compared to many terminal emulators, QTerminal is lightweight with fewer dependencies than most.
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7
0
LilyTerm
All
6
Experiences
Pros
5
Cons
1
Top
Pro
Support for tabbing
You can also color and reorder tabs, as well as manipulate tabs through keybindings.
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Con
Annoying behaviors
The default configuration may have some annoying behaviors (that can be removed by changing the default config). Such include asking for confirmation when reusing an existing window or when starting the terminal to launch a specific command.
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Top
Pro
Transparency support improves usability
LilyTerm has true transparency support, making for better GUI usability.
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Top
Pro
Change encoding on-the-fly
LilyTerm can change encoding on-the-fly. UTF-8 is the default encoding.
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Top
Pro
Lightweight
LilyTerm is a terminal emulator that aims to be as lightweight as possible. It requires minimal system resources and has very few dependencies.
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Pro
Fullscreen support
LilyTerm has fullscreen support which improves visibility.
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7
1
iTerm2
All
27
Experiences
Pros
21
Cons
5
Specs
Top
Pro
Extremely customizable
Other than being able to customize the various shortcuts, iTerm2 also lets you customize the colorscheme, font, transparency, etc.
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Top
Con
Keycodes are not passed through following Linux standards
If you come from a Linux terminal emulator (Gnome Terminal, Konsole...) and you rely on key-combos that are widely supported in those, porting the same functionality to iTerm is possible but will require a lot of research and configuration on your part, so account for a long painful adoption period.
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Pro
Autocomplete is built-in
iTerm has autocomplete features built in. It remembers your past commands and when you are writing something on the terminal, simply pressing Control-; it will show you a drop down menu of suggestions from which to choose.
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Con
Not quite as fast as Alacritty or Kitty
Comparing these 3 terminals on the same machine/config, iTerm stands out as the slowest of the bunch. The difference may not be noticeable to all users.
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Pro
Complete out of the box
Unlike most terminal emulators, iTerm2 comes with a pretty complete set of features. It has built-in search, autocompletion, tabbed navigation, Growl support and even a built-in clipboard manager for various API keys and such.
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Con
Way too many menu items and settings
Finding the right one is like searching for a needle in a haystack.
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Top
Pro
Fine tuning for fonts
It's possible to choose a font and adjust vertical and horizontal spacing.
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Top
Con
Doesn't support Snow Leopard 10.6.8
Some people still use Snow Leopard or other 32-bit systems.
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Top
Pro
Can immediately open files inside a text editor
You can Ctrl+Click on a file path to open said file in a text editor.
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Con
Doesn't support RTL
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Top
Pro
Supports mouse actions
Has support for mouse actions like clicking, dragging, selecting, etc.
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Top
Pro
Active maintainers
Issues resolved fast by quality contributors.
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Top
Pro
Works well with powerline fonts
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Top
Pro
Completely free and open source
iTerm2 is completely free and open source. It's released under the GPLv2 license.
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Top
Pro
Split panes
Easy to split panes to either horizontal or vertical sections. Makes it easy to observe multiple console windows.
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Pro
Supported by many applications as a terminal app selection
If an application has terminal integration, there is high probability it allows iTerm2 to be selected.
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Pro
Intuitive
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Pro
Cmd+Shift+I to Input all
Wanna SSH your server from multiple tabs, here you go.
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Pro
You only need to type in commands once
iTerm2 can store up to 4M of history of commands you already used. This, coupled with the built-in search features makes it possible to type a command only once and then search for it through the history for subsequent uses.
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Pro
Works perfect with Oh My Zsh
It's a perfect base to add Oh My Zsh on top of it and enjoy a lot of themes and a really pleasant look and feel.
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Top
Pro
Works well with tmux
The great mouse and clipboard support that are built-in go really well with tmux.
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Pro
Any key can be mapped to any function
Using the Preferences Menu you can set up hotkeys to map virtually any action you can think of to a single key or a combination of them. This is extremely helpful as it allows you to use shortcuts to edit commands you are typing in the terminal and while most terminal emulators have shortcuts for this sort of thing, few of them let you define your own.
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Pro
GPU-rendered, blazing fast and super smooth
Many people say they use Kitty or Alacritty because they are GPU-rendered. That was true a long time ago. But iTerm2 has been GPU rendered for years now. It's so fast and smooth that you soon forget you are in a terminal.
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Pro
Beautiful, minimalistic and elegant UI
It's super-clean and during use it gets completely out of the way, it's a beautiful canvas for your terminal work, a pure joy that never gets old.
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Pro
Can be configured as a drop-down terminal
Can be configured to work as a drop down terminal like Quake.
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Pro
Cmd+D to split plane vertically
Very handy to use multi-tab.
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Specs
Supported platforms:
macOS
Ligature support:
Yes
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654
56
Extraterm
All
9
Experiences
Pros
8
Specs
Top
Pro
speed
not the fastest ever, but for me its a good comprimise of features vs performance
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Pro
Cross platform
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Pro
Supports tab, splits and panes
You can set up your own layout with multiple splits and tabs.
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Top
Pro
Shell integration
The shell integration makes it possible to group in command output in "frames" which show success/failure.
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Pro
Image support
You can view images and other data types like audio directly in the terminal.
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Pro
Keyboard based text selection
It is possible to go into a cursor mode where you can select text just like in a text editor. It even supports multiple cursors.
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Pro
Global shortcuts
You can configure global shortcuts to open the terminal.
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Pro
Keyboard friendly "Command Palette"
Just like Sublime, Atom and VSCode you can easily search and find commands from the drop down Command Palette.
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Specs
License:
MIT
Keep this Behind an Admin panel:
----
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Experiences
0
5
1
cool-retro-term
All
7
Experiences
Pros
4
Cons
3
Top
Pro
Mimics the look and feel of the old cathode tube screens
Cool-retro-term mimics the look of old cathode screens. This is just aesthetic, but great for people who want a more retro feel.
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Top
Con
Not very practical by today's standards
While it certainly has an aesthetic feel, cool-retro-term is nothing more than a cool trick if you want to play around. It's not very useful in this day and age.
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Pro
Good rendering
If you disable every special effect and the framing, the rendering is actually quite comfortable and readable making a good terminal option if you have CPU cycles to spare.
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Con
Extremely heavy and impactful on resources
A massive amount of resources are used as graphical processing in cool-retro-term. They are ridiculously heavy for the terminal's intended use.
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Pro
Good fun
For simple tasks this is wonderful - anyone seeing it will love it, takes me back to using the Commodore Pet in college in the early 80's.
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Con
Large dependency on kde
It looks like many of the effects present here are provided by more or less stock kde effect libraries. For Gnome-based systems, installing this will pull in a large handful of kde libs.
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Pro
Available in multiple repositories
This terminal is available for download from repositories in all the most popular distros, making it easily available.
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