I cast “sudo dnf update --refresh”!
Jokes aside,
it’s interesting/nice if there already is a Konsole version of “my request”, but I am looking for a “User Interface” version, since it would also be easier to use.
Most, if not all people, prefer to first do thing in the intuitive way (which is also usually easier and/or more convenient), and only after go for the “more inconvenient way”.
When I update my computers here on Fedora KDE I mainly use the Konsole because it is faster, I can see all the different packets (and possible related problems) and if there’s an error, a fail, or if the power cuts out, I believe it “may be the safest way to update or do prevent corrupted data”.
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What comes easiest to humans when using a computer (desktop, laptop or phone) is to “select multiple files through the UI, and then deciding to cut, copy or delete them”.
It’s so “normal and convenient” for us that basically all companies already put a UI function that allows this (it’s present in basically all Linux Distros too).
It also comes easier to people to “learn how to play with the UI” rather than “being asked to memorise and/or use magic spells which they don’t know/care the meaning of”…
I am between “the granpa trying to figure out how folders work” and “those people who code software and build hardware”.
I am an enthusiast with special interests, and honestly I’ll take the first chance available to do something through the UI when the Konsole is not the only option available (I have to work with Windows 98 for a completely separate project; I don’t like DOS man , I want me .ico files on le desktop…).
The only issue I see here is the coding work which would come into making this (assuming that it does not already exist).
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The functioning of such operation would be this:
A) “if group_1 of files and group_2 of files are being copied from Drive A to Drive B, then first finish copying g_1 before starting copying g_2”.
B) “if multiple files are being copied from Drive 1 to Drive 2 and 3, then finish operation with D 2 and then do D 3”.
C) “if D 1 and D 2 are pasting files to D 3, then finish first D 1’s files and then D 3’s”.