Unzip app for Ubuntu

IamDavid

Diamond Member
Sep 13, 2000
5,888
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81
Hate the built in extractor. Need one that can extract all formats and handle ultiple files at once. Any suggestions?

 

Crusty

Lifer
Sep 30, 2001
12,684
2
81
unzip * :p


I never use the GUI programs for playing with zip/tar files. I find the CLI tools to be far more efficient.
 

Nothinman

Elite Member
Sep 14, 2001
30,672
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The 7zip cli tool is OSS and packaged for Ubuntu, no clue about GUI tools though.
 

sourceninja

Diamond Member
Mar 8, 2005
8,805
65
91
I've always used the command line or the built in extractor which has handled all the formats I use (rar, tar, gzip, zip, and bz2)
 

Gamingphreek

Lifer
Mar 31, 2003
11,679
0
81
I have always used the CLI built in extractor. What format are you dealing with that it cannot handle??
 

postmortemIA

Diamond Member
Jul 11, 2006
7,721
40
91
cli, only it is matter to figure out what extracts what.

for example, what extracts rar files? (beside utility from winrar, which is free but not OSS)
 

heymrdj

Diamond Member
May 28, 2007
3,999
63
91
*sighs* This is why linux doesn't become mainstream. Get your heads out of your elitist CLI tailpipes. A desktop user doesn't want to have to to su into an admin terminal just to unzip something. There should be something like Izarc. Right click file, unzip, no matter what of the 30 different compression formats out there. If Linux can't do this yet, that just proves why it's not ready for the public.

What do you know, there is. http://peazip.sourceforge.net/ Cogman already mentioned it.
 

Nothinman

Elite Member
Sep 14, 2001
30,672
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0
*sighs* This is why linux doesn't become mainstream. Get your heads out of your elitist CLI tailpipes. A desktop user doesn't want to have to to su into an admin terminal just to unzip something. There should be something like Izarc. Right click file, unzip, no matter what of the 30 different compression formats out there. If Linux can't do this yet, that just proves why it's not ready for the public.

This has nothing to do with Linux and it's mainstream acceptance, especially because the GUI tools for handling archives do support every format that I've ever run into so there's nothing to see here. Gnome and KDE are light years ahead of Windows in this respect because they support just about all of them out of the box while Windows Explorer barely handles zip files.
 

IamDavid

Diamond Member
Sep 13, 2000
5,888
10
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Originally posted by: Nothinman
*sighs* This is why linux doesn't become mainstream. Get your heads out of your elitist CLI tailpipes. A desktop user doesn't want to have to to su into an admin terminal just to unzip something. There should be something like Izarc. Right click file, unzip, no matter what of the 30 different compression formats out there. If Linux can't do this yet, that just proves why it's not ready for the public.

This has nothing to do with Linux and it's mainstream acceptance, especially because the GUI tools for handling archives do support every format that I've ever run into so there's nothing to see here. Gnome and KDE are light years ahead of Windows in this respect because they support just about all of them out of the box while Windows Explorer barely handles zip files.

I agree accept the fact it's not as point and click as it needs to be for regular joe's to use efficiently. Still can't find a way to queue files.
 

Nothinman

Elite Member
Sep 14, 2001
30,672
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I agree accept the fact it's not as point and click as it needs to be for regular joe's to use efficiently. Still can't find a way to queue files.

So regular joes don't just double-click on a zip file then either drag the contents to their desktop or double-click on the contents? That's always been my experience.
 

IamDavid

Diamond Member
Sep 13, 2000
5,888
10
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Originally posted by: Nothinman
I agree accept the fact it's not as point and click as it needs to be for regular joe's to use efficiently. Still can't find a way to queue files.

So regular joes don't just double-click on a zip file then either drag the contents to their desktop or double-click on the contents? That's always been my experience.

I never open/double click on the file. Right click, than extract here or add to queue when in windows which I'm trying to eliminate. The built in utility is now opening everything, not sure what I did to get it there but it's great. Now I need the queue.
 

Crusty

Lifer
Sep 30, 2001
12,684
2
81
Originally posted by: heymrdj
*sighs* This is why linux doesn't become mainstream. Get your heads out of your elitist CLI tailpipes. A desktop user doesn't want to have to to su into an admin terminal just to unzip something. There should be something like Izarc. Right click file, unzip, no matter what of the 30 different compression formats out there. If Linux can't do this yet, that just proves why it's not ready for the public.

What do you know, there is. http://peazip.sourceforge.net/ Cogman already mentioned it.

Who said any of us here are "elitist"? The CLI has it's uses and so does the GUI. For file manipulation I much prefer the CLI, for web browsing a GUI is far better unless you like lynx :Q

Why do you feel the need to come in here and flame people for suggesting CLI tools? Are you a GUI elitist?

Both Gnome and KDE have built-in extraction tools, and they are quite simple to use as well. So before you come back in here and make more outlandish claims about why Linux isn't ready for the mainstream I suggest you do some more research.
 

Nothinman

Elite Member
Sep 14, 2001
30,672
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0
I never open/double click on the file. Right click, than extract here or add to queue when in windows which I'm trying to eliminate. The built in utility is now opening everything, not sure what I did to get it there but it's great. Now I need the queue.

Windows built-in unzip has a queue?
 

IamDavid

Diamond Member
Sep 13, 2000
5,888
10
81
Originally posted by: Nothinman
I never open/double click on the file. Right click, than extract here or add to queue when in windows which I'm trying to eliminate. The built in utility is now opening everything, not sure what I did to get it there but it's great. Now I need the queue.

Windows built-in unzip has a queue?

Nope, and neither does Linux. And I can't seem to find an add on for it either.
 

Praetor

Diamond Member
Oct 14, 1999
4,498
4
81
Originally posted by: IamDavid
Originally posted by: Nothinman
I never open/double click on the file. Right click, than extract here or add to queue when in windows which I'm trying to eliminate. The built in utility is now opening everything, not sure what I did to get it there but it's great. Now I need the queue.

Windows built-in unzip has a queue?

Nope, and neither does Linux. And I can't seem to find an add on for it either.

for z in *.zip; do unzip $z; done