ranger v.1.6.1 ============== ranger is a console file manager with VI key bindings. It provides a minimalistic and nice curses interface with a view on the directory hierarchy. It ships with "rifle", a file launcher that is good at automatically finding out which program to use for what file type. ![screenshot](doc/screenshot.png) This file describes ranger and how to get it to run. For instructions on the usage, please read the man page. See doc/HACKING for development specific information. For configuration, check the files in ranger/config/. They are usually installed to /usr/lib/python*/site-packages/ranger/config/ and can be obtained with ranger's --copy-config option. The doc/examples/ directory contains several scripts and plugins that demonstrate how ranger can be extended or combined with other programs. A note to packagers: Versions meant for packaging are listed in the changelog on the website. About ----- * Authors: Check the copyright notices in each source file * License: GNU General Public License Version 3 * Website: http://ranger.nongnu.org/ * Download: http://ranger.nongnu.org/ranger-stable.tar.gz * Bug reports: https://github.com/hut/ranger/issues * git clone http://git.sv.gnu.org/r/ranger.git Design Goals ------------ * An easily maintainable file manager in a high level language * A quick way to switch directories and browse the file system * Keep it small but useful, do one thing and do it well * Console based, with smooth integration into the unix shell Features -------- * UTF-8 Support (if your python copy supports it) * Multi-column display * Preview of the selected file/directory * Common file operations (create/chmod/copy/delete/...) * Renaming multiple files at once * VIM-like console and hotkeys * Automatically determine file types and run them with correct programs * Change the directory of your shell after exiting ranger * Tabs, Bookmarks, Mouse support Dependencies ------------ * Python (tested with version 2.6, 2.7, 3.1, 3.2) with support for ncurses and (optionally) wide-unicode. * A pager ("less" by default) Optional: * The "file" program for determining file types * The python module "chardet", in case of encoding detection problems * "sudo" to use the "run as root"-feature * w3m for the "w3mimgdisplay" program to preview images Optional, for enhanced file previews (with "scope.sh"): * img2txt (from caca-utils) for ASCII-art image previews * highlight for syntax highlighting of code * atool for previews of archives * lynx, w3m or elinks for previews of html pages * pdftotext for pdf previews * transmission-show for viewing bit-torrent information * mediainfo or exiftool for viewing information about media files Installing ---------- Use the package manager of your operating system to install ranger. Note that ranger can be started without installing by simply running ranger.py. To install ranger manually: > sudo make install This translates roughly to: > sudo python setup.py install --optimize=1 --record=install_log.txt This also saves a list of all installed files to install_log.txt, which you can use to uninstall ranger. Getting Started --------------- After starting ranger, you can use the Arrow Keys (or hjkl) to navigate, Enter to open a file or type Q to quit. The third column shows a preview of the current file. The second is the main column and the first shows the parent directory. Ranger can automatically copy default configuration files to ~/.config/ranger if you run it with the switch --copy-config. (see ranger --help for a description of that switch.) Also check ranger/config/ for the default configuration.