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Home/ Questions/Q 69035
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T19:30:37+00:00 2026-05-10T19:30:37+00:00

I’ve found the open command in Mac OS X very handy in the command

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I’ve found the ‘open’ command in Mac OS X very handy in the command line. From ‘man open’:

The open command opens a file (or a directory or URL), just as if you had double-clicked the file’s icon. If no application name is specified, the default application as determined via LaunchServices is used to open the specified files.

That is, if I want to open a PDF file with the default PDF viewer (happens to be Preview), I only need to do:

open my.pdf 

In Linux, however, to open a PDF file from the command line, I had to dig around to find the default PDF viewer is, for instance, ‘evince’ (who’d have guessed??), and then

evince my.pdf 

So, is there a simple equivalent of the ‘open’ command in the Linux command line?

Thanks!

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  1. 2026-05-10T19:30:37+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 7:30 pm

    You could try xdg-open, most Linux distros have it. It will open default associated app for your file.

    FYI https://portland.freedesktop.org/doc/xdg-open.html

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