![]() ![]() I’ve written another article on how to setup NVM on your system to switch and maintain multiple Node.js installations easily. Now you’ve installed and configured a good starting point. It’s worth reading the description for each plugin, because you may end up with being even more productive. So take a minute and read through the descriptions of those plugins before enabling them. Plugins can either extend the auto-completion tab, create new key bindings or create new aliases within your terminal. zshrc file and look for plugins=(), once you find that line, list all plugins you want to use within the braces as shown here: plugins=(git bower sublime brew history node npm sudo web-search). iTerm2 is a terminal emulator meant to be a replacement for macOS terminal and is far more feature rich. I use only a few plugins to keep things simple. To enable them, you’ve to list them inside of your. By default, those plugins were not enabled. ![]() Their documentation on GitHub is listing which plugins were currently part of the release. OH-MY-ZSH ships with support for plugins. I’ve chosen 11pt as font-size for my setup, so apply PowerLine for Regular Font and Non-ASCII Font by clicking each Change Font button and select the PowerLine font. It has a lot of features to customise the terminal and a lot of themes available. You can download the font from here, install this font on your system and then apply it in iTerm2 through Oh My Zsh is an open source, community driven framework for managing zsh configuration. For example, it’s displaying branches in the following way and changed the Shells open with: option to Default login shell while the command (complete path) set to /bin/zsh. Beyond figuring out your color scheme, you might want to add an oh-my-zsh theme that changes up the way your commands or current directory line might look and even can give additional functionality like timestamps and more. Terminal -> Preferences -> General window. Powerline font is responsible for bringing some kind and helpful icons to the terminal. I had a similar issue but I resolved it by executing the command chsh -s /bin/zsh in the terminal,then navigated to. After installation has finished open ~/.zshrc in any editor and set the theme for ZSH ZSH_THEME="agnoster". ![]()
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