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Unable to find my screenshots after much searching

Started by Devolve, March 11, 2008, 08:41:38 PM

Devolve

Hi. I cannot find my screenshots. I have read some posts on the forum in regards to screenshots, but I am still unable to find them. I am running Ubuntu(linux). I checked in my base folder, but there is no screenshots folder. I took my screenshots by typing "/screenshot" into the console. What could be the problem? Where are my screenshots?
Thanks for your help.

TinMan

Are you sure you checked ~/.tremulous/base ?
Check all the directories in ~/.tremulous
Linux: ~/.tremulous/base/
Mac: ~/Library/Application\ Support/Tremulous/base/
Windows: C:\Documents and Settings\username\Local Settings\Application Data\Tremulous\base\

NeonPulse
http://neonpulse.net/media/games/tremulous/base/autoexec.cfg

Devolve

Thanks TinMan. I should probably state right now that I am pretty ignorant about my OS(Linux). I've been using the GUI to get to the base folder. And I don't know why people post the ~ symbol and the " . " before tremulous. I have essentially zero knowledge of the linux filesystem. Is there a place I can type in a file path? Something akin to the Windows "run" box?
But, using the means that I have(the GUI and the search function of Ubuntu) I have been unable to find the screenshots folder in the base folder.

TinMan

If you're using nautilus (the default file manager on Ubuntu) then you can do this:


~/ is just a shortcut of /home/user/, where user is your username. The "." in front of the tremulous directory makes it a hidden directory, you can press "Ctrl+H" in Nautilus to show hidden directories.


Alt+F2 opens the "Run" dialog in Gnome.
Linux: ~/.tremulous/base/
Mac: ~/Library/Application\ Support/Tremulous/base/
Windows: C:\Documents and Settings\username\Local Settings\Application Data\Tremulous\base\

NeonPulse
http://neonpulse.net/media/games/tremulous/base/autoexec.cfg

Devolve

Thank you TinMan! That worked like a charm. And I found my Screenshots folder, and everything is there. I wonder why it doesn't show up when I find the base folder with the search feature's GUI? But anyway, thanks again TinMan!

Odin

A "dot" file or directory(.tremulous is an example) is the equivalent of a hidden file in Windows. If you want to hide a file or directory from showing in all file browsers(ones that respect what a dot file is, such as Nautilus), then put a period in front of the filename.

The ~ symbol is short for the current user's home directory. It actually counts as an environment variable. If your username is "johndoe" then ~ returns /home/johndoe to whatever program you're using.

Devolve

Thanks Odin. This info definitely helps. Very educational thread. lol I am so ignorant about linux.

kevlarman

Quote from: Odin on March 11, 2008, 10:31:53 PM
The ~ symbol is short for the current user's home directory. It actually counts as an environment variable. If your username is "johndoe" then ~ returns /home/johndoe to whatever program you're using.
actually ~ will refer to the home folder listed in the currently visible /etc/passwd, $HOME will contain what ~ was when (or slightly before sometimes) your login shell was created (unless you change it). it's possible for them to be different if you create a chrooted shell (~ will refer to the folder in /etc/passwd in the chroot, $HOME to the folder in /etc/passwd outside it)
Quote from: Asvarox link=topic=8622.msg169333#msg169333Ok let's plan it out. Asva, you are nub, go sit on rets, I will build, you two go feed like hell, you go pwn their asses, and everyone else camp in the hallway, roger?
the dretch bites.
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