Opening the file browser from terminal
nautilus --browser
will ensure that Nautilus is launched in browser mode even if you're normally using it in spatial mode.
You can append the path you want to open to the end:
nautilus --browser ~/some/directory
The gnome-open
command will open a directory with the appropriate application, which in this case is Nautilus:
gnome-open PATH
This will open the directory /tmp
using the Nautilus file browser.
gnome-open /tmp
Or:
cd /tmp
gnome-open .
I like the gnome-open
command because you can use this exact same command to open a file with the appropriate application. No need to remember any funny flags. It just works.
gnome-open file.pdf
will open the PDF in a PDF browser.gnome-open file.zip
will open a zip file using the Zip archive viewer.
It's also similar in name and function to the Mac OS X open
command, for those of us who use Macs.
As of 2018, one can use the GIO commandline tool on Gnome:
gio open some/directory
Edit: Another option is xdg-open. Also take a look at this answer for further details.