A fast, simple bash prompt.
$ cd $WHERE_YOU_KEEP_GITHUB_REPOS
$ git clone https://github.com/skeswa/prompt
$ cd prompt
$ make install
$ . ~/.bashrc
- Path shortening (
~/some/really/long/path/like/this/you/might/see
→~/some/really/l/p/l/t/y/might/see
) - Basic git branch or ref information
- Relatively good performance (we try to limit sub-shells as much as possible)
- Customizable colors
- Good documentation (lotsa comments - just in case you want to tweak something)
- Git tab-completion
- Autocomplete command history with arrow keys
- Makes bash feel a little more modern
- We assume that you have
bash
installed at version3.0.0
or higher - We assume that you have
git
installed at version2.0.0
or higher - We assume that your terminal supports 256 colors
- We assume that your terminal color scheme has a dark(ish) background
$ cd $WHERE_YOU_KEEP_GITHUB_REPOS/prompt
$ git pull
$ . ~/.bashrc
Colors can be customized by editing the following environment variables:
PROMPT_PWD_COLOR
- Color for the current working directory (e.g.~/a/b/c
), defaults to38;5;43
PROMPT_GIT_COLOR
- Color for the current git branch/ref (e.g.:master
), defaults to38;5;105
PROMPT_USERHOST_COLOR
- Color for the current user session info (e.g.corey@desktop
), defaults to38;5;39
PROMPT_DOLLAR_COLOR
- Color for the dollar sign, defaults to38;5;255
PROMPT_ERROR_COLOR
- Color for the dollar sign when the previous command failed, defaults to38;5;204
To come up with your own colors, take a look at the reference graphic below from wikipedia:
You can override the host name of your prompt (the desktop
part of corey@desktop
) by setting the PROMPT_HOST_NAME
environment variable. For example, if your desired prompt is corey@inthehouse
, then you might stick this in your ~/.bashrc
before the . ~/.prompt/prompt.bash
:
export PROMPT_HOST_NAME='inthehouse'
bash provides a special set of variables for your prompts. PS1
is the one used by default. The install script adds a command to ~/.bashrc
, a file that is run every time a new terminal opens. Inside of the new command, we run our script and set your PS1
which runs some git
commands to determine its current state and outputs them as a string.
Linux and Mac OSX are supported platforms.
Try on Windows at your own peril.
To uninstall prompt
, perform the following steps:
- Remove
. ~/.prompt/prompt.bash
and. ~/.prompt/git-completion.bash
from~/.bashrc
- Delete
~/.prompt
(e.g.rm ~/.prompt
) - Remove the repository folder from which
prompt
was originally installed - During installation, we may have added a
. ~/.bashrc
invocation to~/.bash_profile
,~/.bash_login
, or~/.profile
- Feel free to remove this if it's no longer necessary
Copyright (c) 2017 Sandile Keswa
Licensed under the MIT license.