Ptyxis becomes default terminal in Ubuntu and Fedora

Ptyxis, a modern GTK4-based terminal emulator, has been adopted as the default terminal by Ubuntu and Fedora. Developed for GNOME integration and modern workflows, it offers features like container support and visual tab management. Users praise its enhancements over traditional options like GNOME Terminal.

Ptyxis provides a cohesive look within the GNOME desktop through GTK4 and libadwaita. Designed for contemporary software development, it stands out with seamless integration for container tools such as Podman, Distrobox, and Toolbox. The terminal automatically detects these environments, allowing quick access via a dropdown in the title bar, coordinated by the ptyxis-agent. It has gained rapid popularity in the Linux community and serves as the default for Fedora and upcoming Ubuntu releases. Ubuntu and Fedora selected Ptyxis for its upgrades, including a visual tab overview resembling GNOME Activities. Users can preview tabs, drag to rearrange, pin important ones, custom name them, and search through multiple sessions. This system simplifies managing numerous active sessions. Additional highlights include preset color schemes like Omni, Pixiefloss, and Tomorrow Night Ubuntu, which adapt across the interface. Scrollback search via SHIFT + CTRL + F supports case matching, whole words, and regex. Profiles enable custom shells or containers without system changes, while context awareness flags root or SSH sessions with a red title bar. Hidden tools like customizable shortcuts and the Terminal Inspector aid developers in monitoring processes and hyperlinks. The emulator improves daily use, though container features may not suit all. Its developers tailored it for smoother workflows, positioning it as a strong successor to GNOME Terminal.

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