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Links in welcome messages are a little confusing #151

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allanday opened this issue May 7, 2019 · 3 comments
Open

Links in welcome messages are a little confusing #151

allanday opened this issue May 7, 2019 · 3 comments
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2. Documentation The issue is related to the user documentation 5. Good First Issue Good for newcomers

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@allanday
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allanday commented May 7, 2019

The links that are shown in the welcome messages are cool, but I think that they might confuse some people:

image

Links of this sort aren't typical in the terminal, and I'm not sure that the dotted underline will always be understood to mean that it's a link.

The other issue is that, if it is a link, clicking it should open something, and it doesn't.

It might be better to change the link text to be the address, so people are able to easily identify it as a link.

@HarryMichal HarryMichal added 2. Documentation The issue is related to the user documentation 5. Good First Issue Good for newcomers labels Sep 9, 2020
returntrip added a commit to returntrip/toolbox that referenced this issue Oct 29, 2020
@aniruddha2000
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Hello! I am new to this project and would like to contribute :D
Seems it's a documentation issue so I would like to work on this.

@debarshiray
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debarshiray commented Feb 10, 2023

Links of this sort aren't typical in the terminal, and I'm not
sure that the dotted underline will always be understood
to mean that it's a link.

They are actually becoming common these days. The ability to mark some text as a hyperlink, similar to HTML's <a href= was introduced by VTE (see bug 779734 and issue 7736) and iTerm2 (see issue 5158) in 2017. Since then a number of terminal emulators have added support for it, including Windows Terminal, Konsole, Alacritty, tmux and xterm.js.

Similarly, a bunch of CLI applications and tools have started using it. Among them, systemd (try hostnamectl, systemctl status sssd-kcm), GCC, less and groff.

Here is a more exhaustive write-up on the topic.

The other issue is that, if it is a link, clicking it should
open something, and it doesn't.

It might be better to change the link text to be the
address, so people are able to easily identify it as a link.

At the moment, in GNOME Terminal, hovering the mouse on top of the link shows a bubble with the link, and one can use ctrl+click or right click to open it.

I suppose it's worth discussing with the terminal folks what the behaviour should be?

@debarshiray
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I mean, hostnamectl and systemctl status ... are vastly more exposed to users than the one-time Toolbx banner. So it's worth trying to see what the consensus is, and if it can be improved, before doing a one-off in Toolbx.

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Labels
2. Documentation The issue is related to the user documentation 5. Good First Issue Good for newcomers
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