Obviously this setup works for me, a JavaScript developer, but this particular setup may not work for you. If this particular setup doesn't work for you, please steal ideas from this and if you like, contribute back tips, tricks, PRs, and other tidbits if you like!
First, you may want to backup any existing files that exist so this doesn't overwrite your work.
Run install/backup.sh
to backup all symlinked files to a ~/dotfiles-backup
directory.
This will not delete any of these files, and the install scripts will not overwrite any existing. After the backup is complete, you can delete the files from your home directory to continue installation.
Then, clone the dotfiles repository to your computer. This can be placed anywhere, and symbolic links will be created to reference it from your home directory.
➜ git clone https://github.com/nicknisi/dotfiles.git ~/.dotfiles
➜ cd ~/.dotfiles
➜ ./install.sh
install.sh
will start by initializing the submodules used by this repository (if any). Read through this file and comment out anything you don't want installed. Then, it will install all symbolic links into your home directory. Every file with a .symlink
extension will be symlinked to the home directory with a .
in front of it. As an example, vimrc.symlink
will be symlinked in the home directory as ~/.vimrc
. Then, this script will create a ~/.vim-tmp
directory in your home directory, as this is where vim is configured to place its temporary files. Additionally, all files in the $DOTFILES/config
directory will be symlinked to the ~/.config/
directory for applications that follow the XDG base directory specification, such as neovim.
ZSH is configured in the zshrc.symlink
file, which will be symlinked to the home directory. The following occurs in this file:
- set the
EDITOR
to nvim - Load any
~/.terminfo
setup - Set the
CODE_DIR
variable, pointing to the location where the code projects exist for exclusive autocompletion with thec
command - Recursively search the
$DOTFILES/zsh
directory for files ending in .zsh and source them - Setup zplug plugin manager for zsh plugins and installed them.
- source a
~/.localrc
if it exists so that additional configurations can be made that won't be kept track of in this dotfiles repo. This is good for things like API keys, etc. - Add the
~/bin
and$DOTFILES/bin
directories to the path - And more...
The prompt is meant to be simple while still providing a lot of information to the user, particularly about the status of the git project, if the PWD is a git project. This prompt sets precmd
, PROMPT
and RPROMPT
.
The precmd
shows the current working directory in it and the RPROMPT
shows the git and suspended jobs info.
The git info shown on the RPROMPT
displays the current branch name, and whether it is clean or dirty.
Additionally, there are ⇣ and ⇡ arrows that indicate whether a commit has happened and needs to be pushed (⇡), and whether commits have happened on the remote branch that need to be pulled (⇣).