Hey there, young’uns! Let me tell you, this here computer stuff, it ain’t as hard as it looks. You wanna make one of them shortcut things on your Linux computer, huh? Well, I heard some folks talkin’ ’bout it the other day, and it ain’t too tough. They was sayin’ somethin’ ’bout Ubuntu, but I reckon it’s all the same, more or less. These computers have a lot of things, I don’t know their names, but I can tell you how to create a shortcut Linux.
First thing you gotta do, I think they called it a “menu” or somethin’. You click around up top, I reckon it’s near where it says “Files” and “Edit”. You gotta find somethin’ called “Preferences”. Don’t rightly know what that means, but just click it. Then, you look for somethin’ that says “Context Menus”. Sounds like some fancy talk, huh? Just click that too. Now, you see a little box that says “Make Link”? You gotta put a checkmark in that box. They was sayin’ to “tick” it, whatever that means. I tell you, these city folks got a strange way of talkin’.
Okay, so now you got that checked. Now, you find that thing you wanna make a shortcut to, it could be a thing called a “folder” or it can be some thing called “application”. I don’t know the difference, but you know what you want, right? You use that right-click button on your mouse, not the one you usually use. I think they call it a mouse. It looks like a mouse but doesn’t have a tail. Anyhow, you click that right button, and you should see that “Make Link” thing again. This time, you use the regular click button, the left one, to click on that. And boom! You got yourself a shortcut! Now, you can get to that thing real easy. This is how to create a shortcut Linux. Some people call it create a shortcut Ubuntu.
I heard them young’uns talkin’ ’bout another way to do it too, somethin’ ’bout a “desktop” and somethin’ called GUI. It is not important. All those names, I can’t remember. They said you could make shortcuts for them programs you got on your computer, like for the installed “applications”. They were sayin’ somethin’ ’bout Ubuntu 20.04 and 18.04. Sounds like some kind of secret code. This is about how to create a shortcut Linux, I think it is the same.
- You find the thing you want on your desktop.
- Right click it, I think.
- Click on the thing, then you will see something about making a shortcut.
Now this desktop shortcut is just a faster way to open your application. You can click it twice to open it. I think this method is more easy. I don’t know how to do it exactly, but you can try to find it. Maybe it is similar to the method I said before.
Then there’s this other thing they was talkin’ ’bout, somethin’ ’bout a “browser”. Sounds like somethin’ you use to look at cows grazin’ in the field. But I think they meant that thing you use to look at stuff on the internet, you know, like that Firefox or Chrome thing. They said you could make a shortcut to a “URL”. Don’t ask me what a URL is. I think it’s like an address, but for the internet. These city folks and their internet. It’s like a whole other world in there. But just try to find how to create a shortcut Linux.
They said somethin’ ’bout “drag and drop”. You know, like when you drag a heavy sack of potatoes across the floor? Only on the computer, you use that mouse thingy. And you drop it on the “desktop”. I reckon it’s like droppin’ that sack on the floor, only less messy. They say some versions of Firefox and Chrome can do this. To visit the URL, you need to double click the shortcut. They say it makes a shortcut right on your desktop. Then you just gotta click on it twice real fast, and it takes you to that internet place. I don’t know how it works but it just does. If you want to go to somewhere quickly, you need to create a shortcut Linux.
So, there you have it. A few ways to make them shortcuts on your Linux computer. It ain’t as hard as it seems, even for an old gal like me. If I can figure it out, you young’uns should have no problem at all. These methods are about how to create a shortcut Linux. It is the same for different systems. Just remember to click around, and don’t be afraid to try things out. That’s how you learn. And if you mess somethin’ up, well, just ask someone younger, they’ll probably know how to fix it. These young folks, they grew up with these computers. They know all the tricks!
Now, go on and try it out! And don’t forget to have a nice piece of pie afterward. You deserve it after all that computer work!