Tired of using the built-in shell that has a bad developer experience? Do you want to have the awesomeness in your terminal with a cool autocomplete, 24-bit colors, customized prompt to display the info you need most? In such case, this guide is for you!
I use my terminal environment a lot for different tasks. When you work with your terminal a lot, eventually, you end up with plugins you use, themes you installed, external dependencies you need and stuff like that.
Once you re-install the operating system, you need to go through configuration again - pain! The same happened to me, so I’ve decided that I can automate installation for my terminal environment.
Moreover, I shared it with you all in a handy Bash script that is easy to use.
Bash Installer is smart enough to detect the missing parts |
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Fish Completions | Customized Prompt |
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Native Notifications | Node.js Version Manager |
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Colorized built-ins | Colorized man pages |
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Jump between Projects | up to directory |
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- Bash script that automates the whole configuration routine and easy to use, just copy paste.
- The commands in script are idempotent, so that you can run the script as many times as you like.
- Detects if your machine does not have something installed and installs it automatically.
- Command Line Tools, Homebrew, iTerm2, Color Scheme, Nerd Fonts, Fish Shell, Fisher and Plugins included.
- Theme
bobthefish
which is based on popularagnoster
and configured to use nerd fonts. - Plugins included like
bass
to support Bash scripts in Fish, functions likepj
to jump between projects, etc.
Just copy and paste the command into your terminal - simple. The installer detects what is absent from your machine and will install it. In case your machine already has a dependency, it will skip the installation for it.
bash <(curl --silent --location "https://github.com/ghaiklor/iterm-fish-fisher-osx/blob/master/install.sh?raw=true")
In case you want to set up everything manually, this section is for you.
Command Line Tools are the tools that are required to use your Mac as a developer machine. This package contains tools like git, header files, etc... Although, you don’t need to install the whole XCode app for that. You can install only the required part by executing:
xcode-select --install
Homebrew is “The Missing Package Manager for macOS”. It provides the way to install the packages to your machine as with usual package managers on Linux, like yum or apt-get.
/bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)"
NOTE: Depending on the MacBook you have, the path where Homebrew will be installed differs. For Intel based Mac it's /usr/local/bin/brew, while for ARM based Mac it's /opt/homebrew/bin/brew.
iTerm2 is a replacement for Terminal and the successor to iTerm. It works on Macs with macOS 10.14 or newer. iTerm2 brings the terminal into the modern age with features you never knew you always wanted.
This is one of the terminal emulators, that works great with color fidelity and patched fonts with ligatures. Also, it has a tmux support and a lot of other stuff. Check out their website for more details.
brew install --cask iterm2
Install the color scheme for iTerm2 that uses Material Design Color Palette. Download the file material-design-colors.itermcolors and open it to import into iTerm2. Afterwards, apply the color palette in Preferences -> Profiles -> Default -> Colors.
There is a project called Nerd Fonts. Nerd Fonts is a project that patches developer targeted fonts with a high number of glyphs (icons). Specifically, to add a high number of extra glyphs from popular ‘iconic fonts’ such as Font Awesome, Devicons, Octicons, and others.
We use one of their fonts to render the theme that uses ligatures from there. So you need to download the font, install it in the Font Book and apply in your terminal emulator [iTerm2].
When you download the font, you can open it by double clicking.
It will open the Font Book and install the font.
Afterwards, go to iTerm2 -> Preferences -> Profiles -> Default -> Text and set the font FiraCode Nerd Font
.
Set the same font for "Non-ASCII text" and do not forget to check the “Use ligatures“ checkbox.
Fish Shell is a smart and user-friendly command line shell for Linux, macOS, and the rest of the family.
First, install the shell using homebrew:
brew install fish
Now, we can’t change the default shell without adding it to the list of known shells:
command -v fish | sudo tee -a /etc/shells
Change the default shell to Fish Shell:
chsh -s "$(command -v fish)"
Restart your terminal emulator and make sure that you are under Fish Shell now.
In case you own an ARM based Mac, you will have a Homebrew installed in /opt/homebrew/bin/brew
.
The problem is that this path is not added by default, so you need to add it yourself.
fish_add_path /opt/homebrew/bin/
Afterwards, you can install Fisher. Fisher is a plugin manager for Fish. It helps manage functions, completions, bindings, and snippets from the command line.
curl -sL https://git.io/fisher | source && fisher install jorgebucaran/fisher
Small things left. Just install the plugins using Fisher. Here is the list of plugins:
When you finished installing the plugins, you need to configure some of them. You need to enable the Nerd Fonts support for the theme, change the color palette and set the path where your projects located.
set --universal --export theme_nerd_fonts yes
set --universal --export theme_color_scheme zenburn
set --universal --export PROJECT_PATHS ~/Library/Projects
Afterwards, update the completions for Fish Shell to get an amazing auto-complete in your shell:
fish_update_completions