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What are dotfiles?

Dotfiles are files in your home directory that begin with a dot, by default they are hidden and used to set configuration settings for bash, git, code editors, etc.

Why would I want my dotfiles on GitHub?

  • Backup, restore, and sync the prefs and settings for your toolbox. Your dotfiles might be the most important files on your machine.
  • Learn from the community. Discover new tools for your toolbox and new tricks for the ones you already use.
  • Share what you've learned with the rest of us.

Description

ZSH with powerlevel10k, prompt renders under 40ms. iTerm2 with some custom keybindings, used as a hotkey window which can be called on top of any full screen app.

image

Installation

You only need to execute a makefile which will symlink all files in your home directory replacing any existing files.

make

Requirements

/bin/bash -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Homebrew/install/HEAD/install.sh)"
brew bundle
chsh -s $(which zsh)

Keyboard Shortcuts

Non-default shortcuts are highlighted in bold.

Keystroke Description
Ctrl + a Go to the beginning of the line (Home)
Ctrl + e Go to the End of the line (End)
Ctrl + p, Arrow Up Previous command
Ctrl + n, Arrow Down Next command
Alt + b, Option + Arrow Left Back (left) one word
Alt + f, Option + Arrow Right Forward (right) one word
Ctrl + xx Toggle between the start of line and current cursor position
Ctrl + L Clear the Screen, similar to the clear command
Alt + Del Delete the Word before the cursor
Alt + d Delete the Word after the cursor
Ctrl + w Cut the Word before the cursor to the clipboard
Ctrl + k Cut the Line after the cursor to the clipboard
Ctrl + u Cut/delete the Line before the cursor to the clipboard
Alt + t Swap current word with previous
Ctrl + t Swap the last two characters before the cursor (typo)
Ctrl + y Paste the last thing to be cut (yank)
Alt + u UPPER capitalize every character from the cursor to the end of the current word
Alt + l Lower the case of every character from the cursor to the end of the current word
Alt + c Capitalize the character under the cursor and move to the end of the word
Alt + r Cancel the changes and put back the line as it was in the history (revert)
Ctrl + _ Undo
TAB Tab completion for file/directory names
Ctrl + r Recall the last command including the specified character(s) searches the command history as you type
Ctrl + p, Arrow Up Previous command in history (i.e. walk back through the command history)
Ctrl + n, Arrow Down Next command in history (i.e. walk forward through the command history)
Ctrl + C Interrupt/Kill whatever you are running (SIGINT)
Ctrl + l Clear the screen
Ctrl + s Stop output to the screen (for long running verbose commands)
Ctrl + q Allow output to the screen (if previously stopped using command above)
Ctrl + D Send an EOF marker, unless disabled by an option, this will close the current shell (EXIT)
Ctrl + Z Send the signal SIGTSTP to the current task, which suspends it. To return to it later enter fg job_name (foreground) or use jobs to list all available jobs
!! Repeat last command
!abc Run last command starting with abc
!abc:p Print last command starting with abc
!$ Last argument of previous command
ALT + . Last argument of previous command
!* All arguments of previous command
^abc­^­def Run previous command, replacing abc with def

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My macOS config for zsh, git, atom, etc.

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