I want to remove Videos and Music from the left side panel. But, I can't seem to find the option to do so. How do you do that?
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I was able to rename them in the side pane by just renaming each folder in the main pane. Highlight, press F2, rename. You might try making a symlink to your NAS folders and putting that in your Home folder, replacing the unneeded default folders. Right-click a destination folder, choose 'Make link', and drag the link into the home folder. Rename it Music or whatever, and replace the defaults. – Tom Brossman Nov 4 '11 at 17:03
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I'd bring something up at brainstorm.ubuntu.com. – nanofarad Aug 27 '12 at 11:49
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1@ObsessiveFOSS Better bring it up to the GNOME devs. – jokerdino♦ Aug 27 '12 at 11:51
Tested in Ubuntu 14.04
Those bookmarks are controlled by ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
and commenting out a lines configures the appearance of the list
As an example, to remove the Videos bookmark from the list change the line:
XDG_VIDEOS_DIR="$HOME/Videos"
to
#XDG_VIDEOS_DIR="$HOME/Videos"
Note:
After login the file ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
gets reverted to the original set by /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
. To prevent that make the file "read-only" either by right clicking and then properties > permissions or using the command
chmod -w ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
If you need to edit the file again do the opposite via Nautilus or use the command
chmod +w ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
If you want to apply this to all users in your system change the file vim /etc/xdg/user-dirs.conf
and set the option enabled
to False
. You need root permissions or this.
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is this the same file as user-dirs.dirs file that is located at: /home/USERNAME/.config/user-dirs.dirs ? I cant find a DIR that is located at ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs – Kalamalka Kid May 8 '16 at 7:20
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Commenting out is not the right solution (let alone changing the file permissions). Instead set e.g.
XDG_VIDEOS_DIR="$HOME"
to disable the videos user directory as other answers suggest. For a source, see freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/xdg-user-dirs/#settings . – balu Jan 12 '18 at 0:56 -
2This doesn't work (for me, at least) on 16.04. @Ben's answer below does work. – AndyP Feb 24 '18 at 2:33
Open the file user-dirs.dirs
in your ~/.config
folder with your favorite text editor.
Comment out the line about the folder, which you do not want to be in the nautilus left pane. I commented about the Videos folder.
.......... .......... ......... XDG_DOCUMENTS_DIR="$HOME/Documents" XDG_MUSIC_DIR="$HOME/Music" XDG_PICTURES_DIR="$HOME/Pictures" #XDG_VIDEOS_DIR="$HOME/Videos"
Then open a terminal, and run xdg-user-dirs-gtk-update
, see the magic.
for 13.04 or later:
In Nautilus >= 3.6 this will not survive a logout/login or reboot. To overcome this we have to point our XDG
directories to "$HOME"
like e.g.:
XDG_VIDEOS_DIR="$HOME"
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I have been looking for this for a while. Great answer. Mark as correct @jokerdino – SimplySimon Jun 4 '13 at 12:37
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3...until you reboot! The way around this is to point the folder to $HOME this sticks :) – SimplySimon Jun 4 '13 at 13:35
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2
Aha - the definitive answer, thanks to A. J. McMinn: Removing entries from Nautilus Places
1) Comment out the unwanted bookmarks in ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
2) Make or edit a ~/.config/user-dirs.conf
file and add the entry enabled=false
.
This solution persists over boot.
*...this could be done with a one-liner: echo "enabled=false" > ~/.config/user-dirs.conf
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5the
enabled=false
flag in~/.config/user-dirs.conf
is the intended way to do this, thechmod -w
way suggested by @Bruno Pereira is a workaround. – LeartS Nov 12 '14 at 17:17 -
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3Actually for 16.04, a log out/log in suffices; no need for full reboot, saves you a few seconds ;-) – sxc731 Jan 2 '17 at 9:38
These directories are set by xdg-user-dirs.
Reading the documentation shows that you can disable a user directory by pointing it to your home directory. Use Ubuntu-Tweak or manually edit the file ~/.conf/user-dirs.dirs and point all the bookmarks you do not want to see to your home dir, and they will also disappear from the Nautilus side bar.
NOTE: I tried commenting out and removing the lines from ~/.conf/user-dirs.dirs as forestpiskie suggests, and that worked only until the next time I logged in. By setting them to the $HOME dir, the settings stuck.
- Make the modifications you want to ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs like comment out the directories you don not want for example.
- For the changes not to be reverted at login, you can execute in your terminal
echo "enabled=false" > ~/.config/user-dirs.conf
which will create the user-dirs.conf file containing the optionenable=false
. - Test the changes and their persistence by logging out and in again. Nautilus should display :
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1Personally, from all the answers out here, this one is the only one that worked. – sinekonata Apr 21 '14 at 18:18
These steps still seem to work in 18.04. Based on comments in this thread I made the following bash script that performs the task. Note, you still need to restart nautilus and right-click remove the items after executing these commands:
nautilus_hide_unwanted_sidebar_items()
{
echo "Removing unwanted nautilus sidebar items"
if [ "1" == "0" ]; then
# Sidebar items are governed by files in $HOME and /etc
ls ~/.config/user-dirs*
ls /etc/xdg/user-dirs*
cat ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
cat ~/.config/user-dirs.locale
cat /etc/xdg/user-dirs.conf
cat /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
#cat ~/.config/user-dirs.conf
fi
### --------------------------------------
### modify local config files in $HOME/.config
### --------------------------------------
chmod u+w ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
#sed -i 's/XDG_DOCUMENTS_DIR/#XDG_DOCUMENTS_DIR/' ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
sed -i 's/XDG_TEMPLATES_DIR/#XDG_TEMPLATES_DIR/' ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
sed -i 's/XDG_PUBLICSHARE_DIR/#XDG_PUBLICSHARE_DIR/' ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
sed -i 's/XDG_MUSIC_DIR/#XDG_MUSIC_DIR/' ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
sed -i 's/XDG_PICTURES_DIR/#XDG_PICTURES_DIR/' ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
sed -i 's/XDG_VIDEOS_DIR/#XDG_VIDEOS_DIR/' ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
###
echo "enabled=true" >> ~/.config/user-dirs.conf
chmod u-w ~/.config/user-dirs.dirs
### --------------------------------------
### Modify global config files in /etc/xdg
### --------------------------------------
#sudo sed -i 's/DOCUMENTS/#DOCUMENTS/' /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
sudo sed -i 's/TEMPLATES/#TEMPLATES/' /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
sudo sed -i 's/PUBLICSHARE/#PUBLICSHARE/' /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
sudo sed -i 's/MUSIC/#MUSIC/' /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
sudo sed -i 's/PICTURES/#PICTURES/' /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
sudo sed -i 's/VIDEOS/#VIDEOS/' /etc/xdg/user-dirs.defaults
###
sudo sed -i "s/enabled=true/enabled=false/" /etc/xdg/user-dirs.conf
sudo echo "enabled=false" >> /etc/xdg/user-dirs.conf
sudo sed -i "s/enabled=true/enabled=false/" /etc/xdg/user-dirs.conf
# Trigger an update
xdg-user-dirs-gtk-update
echo "
NOTE:
After restarting nautilus the unwanted items will be demoted to regular
bookmarks. You can now removed them via the right click context menu.
"
}
Edit -
Dug into it a bit further - if you edit ~/.config/user-dirs.dir you can remove them from the panel and still have them as folders in your /home it seems.
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4That removes the special folder functions also from the system ie: downloads will not be selected as download folder anymore, pictures will not be the default folder when using image programs, I really dont advise you on doing that @jokerdino. – Bruno Pereira Nov 14 '11 at 19:37
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@brunopereira81 Are default directories the only thing this will change? Or might there be other, more drastic things? – Kris Harper Nov 14 '11 at 19:49
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1It will change more then just the default directories I think, thats why the warning, you can ofc set it back to how it was but that file is used to set up which directories you want to use for those functions, remove a directory, remove a function. – Bruno Pereira Nov 14 '11 at 19:51
try going on Bookmarks in window menu, bookmarks > modify bookmarks (translate from italian ubuntu) and the remove the one that you don't want
otherwise Ctrl + D to access the menu
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This doesn't work on Places anymore last I tried on Ubuntu 13.04. Editing the user-dirs.dirs as suggested above worked for me though. – Cardin Aug 24 '13 at 4:26