![]() "Console" or "virtual console" is a term usually used to imply a shell running outside of your desktop.It's more or less a "portal" into your shell. A terminal is only running when you have a terminal window launched. A terminal is an application running within a graphics server (such as X11 or Wayland) with a shell loaded into it.There's technically a shell running somewhere underneath your POSIX desktop, even when it's not visible (because it's a shell that launched your user session). A shell is an input and output screen with a prompt. ![]() Shells, terminals, and consolesīefore you slice and dice screens, you should know the difference between a terminal, a shell, and a "console." To get the full picture, read my article on the subject over on the Enable Sysadmin blog. ![]() ![]() There are many tools in your Linux kit to help you slice and dice your consoles. The only answer is a split screen so that two or more terminals can exist at the same time within just one application window. And yet, sometimes it's distracting or inconvenient to flip back and forth between tabs. Terminal applications with tabs have existed on Linux for a long time, and luckily, that trend seems to have caught on such that it's an expected feature of a modern terminal.
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