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About

A theme engine for Powershell in ConEmu and Windows Terminal inspired by the work done by Chris Benti on PS-Config and Oh-My-ZSH on OSX and Linux (hence the name).

More information about why I made this can be found on my blog.

Theme

Features:

  • Easy installation
  • Awesome prompt themes for PowerShell in ConEmu
  • Git status indications (powered by posh-git)
  • Failed command indication
  • Admin indication
  • Current session indications (admin, failed command, user)
  • Configurable
  • Easily create your own theme
  • Separate settings for oh-my-posh and posh-git
  • Does not mess with the default Powershell console

Prerequisites

You should use ConEmu or Windows Terminal to have a brilliant terminal experience on Windows.

You can install ConEmu using Chocolatey:

choco install ConEmu

You can also install it using Scoop via the extras bucket:

$ scoop search conemu
'extras' bucket:
  conemu (18.xx.xx)
$ scoop install conemu

Windows Terminal can be acquired from the Microsoft Store, the Windows Terminal repo, or via Chocolatey:

choco install microsoft-windows-terminal

The fonts I use are Powerline fonts, there is a great repository containing them. I use Meslo LG M Regular for Powerline Nerd Font in my ConEmu setup together with custom colors. You can find my theme here.

In case you notice weird glyphs after installing a font of choice, make sure the glyphs are available (maybe they have a different location in the font, if so, adjust the correct $ThemeSettings icon). If it turns out the character you want is not supported, select a different font.

Installation

You need to use the PowerShell Gallery to install oh-my-posh.

Install posh-git and oh-my-posh:

Install-Module posh-git -Scope CurrentUser
Install-Module oh-my-posh -Scope CurrentUser

Enable the prompt:

# Start the default settings
Set-Prompt
# Alternatively set the desired theme:
Set-Theme Agnoster

In case you're running this on PS Core, make sure to also install version 2.0.0-beta1 of PSReadLine

Install-Module -Name PSReadLine -AllowPrerelease -Scope CurrentUser -Force -SkipPublisherCheck

To enable the engine edit your PowerShell profile:

if (!(Test-Path -Path $PROFILE )) { New-Item -Type File -Path $PROFILE -Force }
notepad $PROFILE

Append the following lines to your PowerShell profile:

Import-Module posh-git
Import-Module oh-my-posh
Set-Theme Paradox

The last command sets the theme for the console. Check the available themes list below.

Configuration

List the current configuration:

$ThemeSettings

Theme

You can tweak the settings by manipulating $ThemeSettings. This example allows you to tweak the branch symbol using a unicode character:

$ThemeSettings.GitSymbols.BranchSymbol = [char]::ConvertFromUtf32(0xE0A0)

Also do not forget the Posh-Git settings itself (enable the stash indication for example):

$GitPromptSettings

Hide your username@domain when not in a virtual machine for the Agnoster, Fish, Honukai, Paradox and Sorin themes:

$DefaultUser = 'yourUsernameHere'

Helper functions

Set-Theme: set a theme from the Themes directory. If no match is found, it will not be changed. Autocomplete is available to list and complete available themes.

Set-Theme paradox

Show-ThemeColors: display the colors used by the theme

Theme

Show-Colors: display colors configured in ConEmu

Theme

Themes

Agnoster

Agnoster Theme

Paradox

Paradox Theme

Sorin

Sorin Theme

Darkblood

Darkblood Theme

Avit

Avit Theme

Honukai

Honukai Theme

Fish

Fish Theme

Robbyrussell

Robbyrussell Theme

Pararussel

Pararussel Theme

Material

Material Theme Material Theme

Star

Star Theme

Zash

Star Theme

Lambda

Lambda Theme

Emodipt

Emodipt Theme

Creating your own theme

If you want to create a theme it can be done rather easily by adding a mytheme.psm1 file in the folder indicated in $ThemeSettings.MyThemesLocation (the folder defaults to ~\Documents\WindowsPowerShell\PoshThemes, feel free to change it).

The only required function is Write-Theme. You can use the following template to get started:

#requires -Version 2 -Modules posh-git

function Write-Theme
{
    param(
        [bool]
        $lastCommandFailed,
        [string]
        $with
    )

    # enter your prompt building logic here
}

$sl = $global:ThemeSettings #local settings

Feel free to use the public helper functions Get-VCSStatus, Get-VcsInfo, Get-FormattedRootLocation, Get-ShortPath, Set-CursorForRightBlockWrite, Set-CursorUp, Set-Newline or add your own logic completely.

To test the output in ConEmu, just switch to your theme:

Set-Theme mytheme

If you want to include your theme in oh-my-posh, send me a PR and I'll try to give feedback ASAP.

Happy theming!

Adding stack count to a custom theme

As it seems getting access to the stack information when using pushd/popd is sort of mission impossible from within a theme, you can use a workaround proposed by Jonathan Leech-Pepin. In your $PROFILE, add a variable that will act as a correctly scoped pointer to fetch the stack context:

$getStackContext = {Get-Location -Stack}

Next, in your custom theme, access the information you want to display:

$stackCount = (&$getStackContext).count

iTerm2 is creating notifications every time

This is caused by the ConsoleTitle functionality. As explained by Andrew Stanton-Nurse it's linked to how terminals work with OSC codes. The fix is to disable the ConsoleTitle functionality when in iTerm2 by adding the following snippet to your $PROFILE.

if($env:LC_TERMINAL -eq "iTerm2") {
    $ThemeSettings.Options.ConsoleTitle = $false
}

Based on work by

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