how to update nautilus past 3.26












1















I am wondering how I would go about updating nautilus from 3.26 to 3.30, as I need it for an extension to work properly. I tried running apt-get upgrade nautilus with no success. Any ideas are appreciated










share|improve this question

























  • Ubuntu 18.10 comes with 3.26 (packages.ubuntu.com/…), so the upgrade of nautilus will come when you upgrade to 19.04 when released (my box has 3.30.4-stable on it). It's a core program, and would require a lot of updates to also occur (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus to view dependencies), which likewise would cause a lot more updates - so your machine would become 19.04 pretty much to run it. Your only alternative would be a snap type package, but being a core GNOME program I didn't find one.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 6:56











  • would it be possible to update the entirety of gnome to a version that would be using nautilus 3.3?

    – Tyler
    Jan 12 at 20:01











  • 3.3 was used by Ubuntu 12.04; so do you really mean 3.3? or 3.30? (it's not a decimal, it's three.thirty; major.release=3, minor.release=30). gnome 3.3 is EOL, 3.30 is currently in use by Ubuntu 19.04. Ubuntu works on a release system, so the safest & easiest way to use gnome 3.30 is to just use Ubuntu 19.04; the development or 'testing' branch of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 19.04 is not supported on this site (it's off-topic), being supported elsewhere (eg. irc on #ubuntu+1) Yes you can use 19.04 (I'm using it right now; why I have nautilus 3.30.4-stable) but be aware there is no help available here.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 23:44











  • Yes I did mean 3.30 just accidentally kept putting .3, and where did you download your 19.04? I tried the daily builds and mine had nautilus 3.26 still

    – Tyler
    Jan 13 at 1:51











  • My box was a 17.10 daily build once upon a time, and I've just do-release-upgrade -d from that to what it is now (or about every six months), so I'd expect a daily-build to contain the same version as my installed Ubuntu 19.04. I now only test Lubuntu & Xubuntu builds myself, so I've not looked at a GNOME flavored daily build, but I'd expect it to be the same as what I have installed (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus) so check you have the 'disco' & current. I have a script grab mine, latest lubuntu comes from cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current (remove 'l')

    – guiverc
    Jan 13 at 2:01


















1















I am wondering how I would go about updating nautilus from 3.26 to 3.30, as I need it for an extension to work properly. I tried running apt-get upgrade nautilus with no success. Any ideas are appreciated










share|improve this question

























  • Ubuntu 18.10 comes with 3.26 (packages.ubuntu.com/…), so the upgrade of nautilus will come when you upgrade to 19.04 when released (my box has 3.30.4-stable on it). It's a core program, and would require a lot of updates to also occur (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus to view dependencies), which likewise would cause a lot more updates - so your machine would become 19.04 pretty much to run it. Your only alternative would be a snap type package, but being a core GNOME program I didn't find one.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 6:56











  • would it be possible to update the entirety of gnome to a version that would be using nautilus 3.3?

    – Tyler
    Jan 12 at 20:01











  • 3.3 was used by Ubuntu 12.04; so do you really mean 3.3? or 3.30? (it's not a decimal, it's three.thirty; major.release=3, minor.release=30). gnome 3.3 is EOL, 3.30 is currently in use by Ubuntu 19.04. Ubuntu works on a release system, so the safest & easiest way to use gnome 3.30 is to just use Ubuntu 19.04; the development or 'testing' branch of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 19.04 is not supported on this site (it's off-topic), being supported elsewhere (eg. irc on #ubuntu+1) Yes you can use 19.04 (I'm using it right now; why I have nautilus 3.30.4-stable) but be aware there is no help available here.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 23:44











  • Yes I did mean 3.30 just accidentally kept putting .3, and where did you download your 19.04? I tried the daily builds and mine had nautilus 3.26 still

    – Tyler
    Jan 13 at 1:51











  • My box was a 17.10 daily build once upon a time, and I've just do-release-upgrade -d from that to what it is now (or about every six months), so I'd expect a daily-build to contain the same version as my installed Ubuntu 19.04. I now only test Lubuntu & Xubuntu builds myself, so I've not looked at a GNOME flavored daily build, but I'd expect it to be the same as what I have installed (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus) so check you have the 'disco' & current. I have a script grab mine, latest lubuntu comes from cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current (remove 'l')

    – guiverc
    Jan 13 at 2:01
















1












1








1








I am wondering how I would go about updating nautilus from 3.26 to 3.30, as I need it for an extension to work properly. I tried running apt-get upgrade nautilus with no success. Any ideas are appreciated










share|improve this question
















I am wondering how I would go about updating nautilus from 3.26 to 3.30, as I need it for an extension to work properly. I tried running apt-get upgrade nautilus with no success. Any ideas are appreciated







apt nautilus 18.10






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Jan 13 at 1:52







Tyler

















asked Jan 12 at 6:49









TylerTyler

814




814













  • Ubuntu 18.10 comes with 3.26 (packages.ubuntu.com/…), so the upgrade of nautilus will come when you upgrade to 19.04 when released (my box has 3.30.4-stable on it). It's a core program, and would require a lot of updates to also occur (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus to view dependencies), which likewise would cause a lot more updates - so your machine would become 19.04 pretty much to run it. Your only alternative would be a snap type package, but being a core GNOME program I didn't find one.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 6:56











  • would it be possible to update the entirety of gnome to a version that would be using nautilus 3.3?

    – Tyler
    Jan 12 at 20:01











  • 3.3 was used by Ubuntu 12.04; so do you really mean 3.3? or 3.30? (it's not a decimal, it's three.thirty; major.release=3, minor.release=30). gnome 3.3 is EOL, 3.30 is currently in use by Ubuntu 19.04. Ubuntu works on a release system, so the safest & easiest way to use gnome 3.30 is to just use Ubuntu 19.04; the development or 'testing' branch of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 19.04 is not supported on this site (it's off-topic), being supported elsewhere (eg. irc on #ubuntu+1) Yes you can use 19.04 (I'm using it right now; why I have nautilus 3.30.4-stable) but be aware there is no help available here.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 23:44











  • Yes I did mean 3.30 just accidentally kept putting .3, and where did you download your 19.04? I tried the daily builds and mine had nautilus 3.26 still

    – Tyler
    Jan 13 at 1:51











  • My box was a 17.10 daily build once upon a time, and I've just do-release-upgrade -d from that to what it is now (or about every six months), so I'd expect a daily-build to contain the same version as my installed Ubuntu 19.04. I now only test Lubuntu & Xubuntu builds myself, so I've not looked at a GNOME flavored daily build, but I'd expect it to be the same as what I have installed (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus) so check you have the 'disco' & current. I have a script grab mine, latest lubuntu comes from cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current (remove 'l')

    – guiverc
    Jan 13 at 2:01





















  • Ubuntu 18.10 comes with 3.26 (packages.ubuntu.com/…), so the upgrade of nautilus will come when you upgrade to 19.04 when released (my box has 3.30.4-stable on it). It's a core program, and would require a lot of updates to also occur (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus to view dependencies), which likewise would cause a lot more updates - so your machine would become 19.04 pretty much to run it. Your only alternative would be a snap type package, but being a core GNOME program I didn't find one.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 6:56











  • would it be possible to update the entirety of gnome to a version that would be using nautilus 3.3?

    – Tyler
    Jan 12 at 20:01











  • 3.3 was used by Ubuntu 12.04; so do you really mean 3.3? or 3.30? (it's not a decimal, it's three.thirty; major.release=3, minor.release=30). gnome 3.3 is EOL, 3.30 is currently in use by Ubuntu 19.04. Ubuntu works on a release system, so the safest & easiest way to use gnome 3.30 is to just use Ubuntu 19.04; the development or 'testing' branch of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 19.04 is not supported on this site (it's off-topic), being supported elsewhere (eg. irc on #ubuntu+1) Yes you can use 19.04 (I'm using it right now; why I have nautilus 3.30.4-stable) but be aware there is no help available here.

    – guiverc
    Jan 12 at 23:44











  • Yes I did mean 3.30 just accidentally kept putting .3, and where did you download your 19.04? I tried the daily builds and mine had nautilus 3.26 still

    – Tyler
    Jan 13 at 1:51











  • My box was a 17.10 daily build once upon a time, and I've just do-release-upgrade -d from that to what it is now (or about every six months), so I'd expect a daily-build to contain the same version as my installed Ubuntu 19.04. I now only test Lubuntu & Xubuntu builds myself, so I've not looked at a GNOME flavored daily build, but I'd expect it to be the same as what I have installed (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus) so check you have the 'disco' & current. I have a script grab mine, latest lubuntu comes from cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current (remove 'l')

    – guiverc
    Jan 13 at 2:01



















Ubuntu 18.10 comes with 3.26 (packages.ubuntu.com/…), so the upgrade of nautilus will come when you upgrade to 19.04 when released (my box has 3.30.4-stable on it). It's a core program, and would require a lot of updates to also occur (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus to view dependencies), which likewise would cause a lot more updates - so your machine would become 19.04 pretty much to run it. Your only alternative would be a snap type package, but being a core GNOME program I didn't find one.

– guiverc
Jan 12 at 6:56





Ubuntu 18.10 comes with 3.26 (packages.ubuntu.com/…), so the upgrade of nautilus will come when you upgrade to 19.04 when released (my box has 3.30.4-stable on it). It's a core program, and would require a lot of updates to also occur (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus to view dependencies), which likewise would cause a lot more updates - so your machine would become 19.04 pretty much to run it. Your only alternative would be a snap type package, but being a core GNOME program I didn't find one.

– guiverc
Jan 12 at 6:56













would it be possible to update the entirety of gnome to a version that would be using nautilus 3.3?

– Tyler
Jan 12 at 20:01





would it be possible to update the entirety of gnome to a version that would be using nautilus 3.3?

– Tyler
Jan 12 at 20:01













3.3 was used by Ubuntu 12.04; so do you really mean 3.3? or 3.30? (it's not a decimal, it's three.thirty; major.release=3, minor.release=30). gnome 3.3 is EOL, 3.30 is currently in use by Ubuntu 19.04. Ubuntu works on a release system, so the safest & easiest way to use gnome 3.30 is to just use Ubuntu 19.04; the development or 'testing' branch of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 19.04 is not supported on this site (it's off-topic), being supported elsewhere (eg. irc on #ubuntu+1) Yes you can use 19.04 (I'm using it right now; why I have nautilus 3.30.4-stable) but be aware there is no help available here.

– guiverc
Jan 12 at 23:44





3.3 was used by Ubuntu 12.04; so do you really mean 3.3? or 3.30? (it's not a decimal, it's three.thirty; major.release=3, minor.release=30). gnome 3.3 is EOL, 3.30 is currently in use by Ubuntu 19.04. Ubuntu works on a release system, so the safest & easiest way to use gnome 3.30 is to just use Ubuntu 19.04; the development or 'testing' branch of Ubuntu. Ubuntu 19.04 is not supported on this site (it's off-topic), being supported elsewhere (eg. irc on #ubuntu+1) Yes you can use 19.04 (I'm using it right now; why I have nautilus 3.30.4-stable) but be aware there is no help available here.

– guiverc
Jan 12 at 23:44













Yes I did mean 3.30 just accidentally kept putting .3, and where did you download your 19.04? I tried the daily builds and mine had nautilus 3.26 still

– Tyler
Jan 13 at 1:51





Yes I did mean 3.30 just accidentally kept putting .3, and where did you download your 19.04? I tried the daily builds and mine had nautilus 3.26 still

– Tyler
Jan 13 at 1:51













My box was a 17.10 daily build once upon a time, and I've just do-release-upgrade -d from that to what it is now (or about every six months), so I'd expect a daily-build to contain the same version as my installed Ubuntu 19.04. I now only test Lubuntu & Xubuntu builds myself, so I've not looked at a GNOME flavored daily build, but I'd expect it to be the same as what I have installed (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus) so check you have the 'disco' & current. I have a script grab mine, latest lubuntu comes from cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current (remove 'l')

– guiverc
Jan 13 at 2:01







My box was a 17.10 daily build once upon a time, and I've just do-release-upgrade -d from that to what it is now (or about every six months), so I'd expect a daily-build to contain the same version as my installed Ubuntu 19.04. I now only test Lubuntu & Xubuntu builds myself, so I've not looked at a GNOME flavored daily build, but I'd expect it to be the same as what I have installed (packages.ubuntu.com/disco/nautilus) so check you have the 'disco' & current. I have a script grab mine, latest lubuntu comes from cdimage.ubuntu.com/lubuntu/daily-live/current (remove 'l')

– guiverc
Jan 13 at 2:01












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