[05:55] <mozammel> Hello guys I've a problem, I cant use Single Click on nautilus file manager, even Single click option activated on preference, I'm using Ubuntu 17.10 gnome DE, Nautilus 3.26.0
[16:41] <Fenhl> hello! I set up gnome-terminal to run /bin/zsh, which worked fine, but after a reboot it now closes immediately. Hitting Alt+F2 and running `gnome-terminal -e /bin/bash` gives the same result. Any ideas?
[16:42] <mgedmin> try running xterm?
[16:43] <mgedmin> edit gnome-terminal's profile with gsettings and change it back to bash?
[16:43] <mgedmin> (I think dconf-editor doesn't support movable schemas yet)
[16:44] <mgedmin> ... why would /bin/zsh stop working?
[16:46] <Fenhl> if I switch to a tty using Ctrl+Alt+3 and log in, it starts Zsh just fine
[16:46] <Fenhl> if I try to run xterm using Alt+F2 it says “Command not found”, should I install it?
[16:46] <mgedmin> do you see any useful errors in journalctl?
[16:47] <mgedmin> yeah, xterm is probably not installed by default
[16:47] <mgedmin> but the point of it was to get a working terminal, and you already have that with ctrl+alt+f3
[16:47] <Fenhl> right
[16:49] <mgedmin> btw did you change your login shell (with chsh), or did you change the gnome-terminal profile?
[16:50] <Fenhl> both
[16:51] <Fenhl> after `chsh`, Terminal still started bash
[16:51] <Fenhl> so I changed the profile settings too
[16:51] <Fenhl> ok, so far I've found the uuid for the terminal profile
[16:52] <mgedmin> hmm, interesting
[16:53] <mgedmin> I like dconf dump / | less to see all the settings I've changed
[16:53] <Fenhl> I have a useful error in journalctl, one sec
[16:53] <mgedmin> (and I like gsettings list-recursively / | less, to see all the values of all the settings, including default values -- it's also more greppable than dconf dump)
[16:57] <Fenhl> https://paste.ubuntu.com/26059190/
[16:58] <Fenhl> it's saying something about size/format constraints, so maybe it doesn't have to do anything with zsh but instead with the maximized terminal hack
[16:59] <Fenhl> I googled for how to have Terminal start maximized automatically and the answer I found was set the rows/cols to 9999
[16:59] <mgedmin> weird
[16:59] <Fenhl> which worked until reboot
[16:59] <mgedmin> haha ok, undo that :)
[17:03] <Fenhl> I found the setting in dconf but not sure how to change it
[17:04] <mgedmin> dconf reset /path/to/key
[17:07] <Fenhl> that worked, thanks
[17:07] <Fenhl> is there a less hackish way of getting Terminal windows to start maximized?
[17:08] <mgedmin> I don't know; I hit <Super>t <Super>Up to launch a maximized terminal
[17:08] <mgedmin> (one is custom keybinding to run gnome-terminal, the other is I believe default keybinding to maximize the window)
[17:11] <Fenhl> I guess 115×31 instead of 9999×9999 also works