When I work in terminal, sometimes I want to open the current directory in a GUI file manager. And then to click the items in the window to run the application. How can I do this?
6 Answers
The following works in all desktop environments by using the default file manager:
xdg-open .
You can also open files from the terminal as if you had double clicked them in the file manager:
xdg-open file

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This shows a deprecation warning, the newer command is
gio open .
(Centos 7) – vulpxn Jul 13 '20 at 03:29 -
Is there a similar command to "Choose a file"? e.g. It will open the default file manager and you can choose/select a file and it'll return the file's absolute path? More like a "File-picker"? – zean_7 Jun 18 '21 at 13:38
Problem
This tip will explain How to open a file manager of the current directory in the terminal
Solution 1
The following works in all desktop environments by using the default file manager:
xdg-open .
Solution 2
You can also open files from the terminal as if you had double clicked them in the file manager:
xdg-open file
Solution 3
If you are using Gnome, you can use the gnome-open command, like so:
gnome-open .
Solution 4
You can use nautilus [path]. for current directory -
nautilus .

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This is the most complete one and should be the answer. Works in RedHat 7.2 x64. – WesternGun Nov 10 '16 at 20:35
You write nautilus [path]. for current directory -
nautilus .

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This has the disadvantage that you have to keep terminal window alive while you are navigating. If you kill the window, the file explorer gets killed too. – gdaras Oct 23 '18 at 15:22
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3This is easily solved by adding
&
to the end like this:nautilus . &
– Vladislav Rastrusny Mar 08 '19 at 14:31 -
In Ubuntu 20.04, you can just say browse .
to open the current directory

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browse
is just a symlink toxdg-open
. So you can use both of them in the same way. (i.e you can also open files withbrowse
) – sahinakkaya Apr 13 '21 at 09:47
If you are using GNOME, you can use the gnome-open
command, like so:
gnome-open .

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I wonder why isn't there common command for opening whatever the GUI is. I have tried all commands from above answers and no one worked for me. This is the only working on Ubuntu – The Godfather Jun 14 '17 at 07:46
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Is there a way to open gnome as sudo? I tried
sudo gnome-open .
with no luck. – Tim Mar 16 '18 at 20:58
You can use, nautilus .
and press enter to open the current directory.
To open path specified location try the following.
E.g. If you want to open Music folder under this location:
/media/dulithdecozta/A08A64BB8A648F98/Music/
Then execute the following.
nautilus /media/dulithdecozta/A08A64BB8A648F98/Music/

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xdg-open .
,nautilus .
,browse .
. Butgnome-open .
did not work as-is (I guess either gnome is not installed or there's some other reason for that). Nonethless, this is to confirm what worked as of 01-Feb-2022. – CypherX Feb 01 '22 at 10:19