![]() ![]() Each had their own drawbacks and I eventually gave up. I think I tried every major Windows terminal app I could find. Working mouse support for scrolling and Vim/Tmux.I wanted to utilize WSL (not Cygwin) and at a minimum needed: I really just wanted the equivalent of iTerm2 in Windows. In this post, I’m going to quickly explain how I got it running and configured, and some of the other options I tried. It supports tabs, splits, mouse mode and has a pretty color scheme to boot: But the only thing holding me back was the lack of a nice terminal emulator (admittedly, I’m shallow and like pretty things).Īfter much tinkering, I’ve ended up with what I feel is the most comfortable terminal experience I can get on Windows. ![]() With the Windows Subystem for Linux (WSL) it’s now possible to have a “native” Ubuntu command line on my Windows 10 machine to use for my CLI nerdiness. I often feel like I just pay the premium for Mac hardware to have a reliable and easy to configure *Nix operating system.īut lately I’ve really been wanting to get off the Mac ecosystem and start using Windows 10 on my X1 Carbon as my daily machine. And using iTerm2 with oh-my-zsh is the best terminal experience I’ve ever had. Python and Node dev environments just work. With Homebrew, command line tools just work. While there’s nothing particularly special about MacOS that I love (in fact there’s quite a bit I don’t like), it’s honestly been the terminal and the underlying Unix based operating system that keep me glued to it. Theme, it’s probably not going to be of much use to you.I’ve been using a Mac as my daily driver for work for the last few years. All I know is I need to import this file on every new machine I use.įor completion, I’m dropping the code for that profile here but unless you love a hot pink box cursor and a Dracula-esque I have an iTerm profile I set up many years ago, I have no idea what is really contained within the profile that isn’tĪ default setting at this point in time. Customise iTermįinally, before I can get started with using my machine there is the small issue of the iTerm2 profile. These customisations barely scratch the surface of what is possible with Vim, to open that can of worms just search for “vim plugin managers”. " This setting allows you to highlight all instances of the word under your " when indenting with '>', use 4 spaces width " coming from other editors would expect. " While this behaviour deviates from that of Vi, it does what most users " Stop certain movements from always going to the first character of a line. ![]() " the same indent as the line you're currently on. " When opening a new line and no filetype-specific indenting is enabled, keep " Set colour line marker to show 100 character of a line " Use visual bell instead of beeping when doing something wrong " Use case insensitive search, except when using capital letters " and for plugins that are filetype specific. Use this to allow intelligent auto-indenting for each filetype, " Attempt to determine the type of a file based on its name and possibly its Save a copy of the above configuration to a file named af-magic24hr.zsh-theme, and if it’s not within the Oh My Zsh # af-magic.zsh-theme # Repo: # Direct Link: if then NCOLOR = "red" else NCOLOR = "green" fi local return_code = "%(?.%" ![]()
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