Terminal-Icons
nerd-fonts
Terminal-Icons | nerd-fonts | |
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12 | 238 | |
2,219 | 51,377 | |
- | - | |
5.7 | 9.7 | |
3 months ago | 2 days ago | |
PowerShell | CSS | |
MIT License | GNU General Public License v3.0 or later |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Terminal-Icons
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icons for directories not visible
Are you using Terminal Icons? You can see if you are by typing Get-Module on a fresh PowerShell. Note that you would probably need to update to 0.10 anyway (Remove-Module Terminal-Icons; Uninstall-Module Terminal-Icons; Install-Module Terminal-Icons)
- Customizando o seu Windows Terminal
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help with the background color of directories in windows terminal
When PowerShell starts, it loads a number of modules. You can view a list of them by typing Get-Module. I personally have TerminalIcons, but it might be a different file. Look also for a file like format.ps1xml, this might also affect your Get-ChildItem formatting.
- Customize Windows Terminal and Git operations
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My Windows, Debian (WSL2) Setup
Install Terminal Icons - Folder and File Icons
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Oh My Zsh and Oh My Posh on Azure Cloud Shell
Install plug-ins for oh-my-posh, like Terminal Icons.
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Things you might not know about Windows Terminal
Terminal Icons makes your ls a bit prettier and more useful.
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Improve window powershell promt with oh-my-posh and more
3> Terminal Icons (display icons of folder/files)
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Choosing arm/bicep over terraform and powershell over cli
I already do, along with oh-my-posh and Terminal-Icons, with the help of Nerd Fonts and other tweaks (PowerShell 7 and updated VSCode terminal with the same enhancements).
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6 steps to pimp my terminal
Terminal-Icons module - check screenshot
nerd-fonts
- Turbinando sua Produtividade: Autocomplete e Personalização no Terminal do Windows
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jokermanBestFont
Use any nerd fonts
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which Font do you use?
SourceCodePro: https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts/tree/master/patched-fonts/SourceCodePro
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Neovim Nerd Font icons are available!
Hot off the press: https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts/releases/tag/v3.1.0
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Berkeley Mono Typeface
It's a bit expensive, and I can understand if someone can't or doesn't want to spend money on it. I would recommend to check out the free fonts 'JetBains Mono' & 'Hack' to these people.
Some people have already mentioned here that Berkeley Mono is not available as Nerd Font. I would like to briefly point out that Nerd Fonts provides a font patcher tool (https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts#font-patcher).
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NvChad - multiple different client offset_encodings detected for buffer
I'm using Neovim v0.9.1 on Ubuntu 23.04 with NvChad. I've also installed the JetBrainsMono font, as NvChad requires a Nerd Font, but nothing besides that and I haven't edited any settings or nvim files and I haven't installed any additional plugins.
- Nerd Fonts
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JetBrains Mono Typeface
There are a lot of code fonts on HN today. Rather than make a new post I will talk about some of my favorite that are a little less common. None of these are free I don't think.
Cartograph CF - The one I've been using for code for years. Very readable, almost "comic mono"-like choices of some of the lower case glyphs but in a good way. All the character is in the italic which you will either love or hate.
Quadraat sans mono - The entire quadraat family is a collection of masterpieces imo, but are generally too distinctive to be appropriate for most public-facing work. But it's your computer so who cares. I use the mono sans one for my terminal. The lowercase f seems so out of place there but you learn to love it.
Alegreya sans - Not a mono font, but it almost is so if you've ever flirted with proportional fonts for code this is a fun one to try. There is a lot of careful line width variation that gives a lot of the appearance and readability advantages of serifs but keeps most of the visual coherence of sans.
I like all of these because they look feel more like normal fonts rather than code fonts. They have careful variation that adds character and improves readability for me. I've switched to an almost-no-color code theme that uses font weight instead, and the details like this become more important that way.
And then only kind of related but if you want to use unusual fonts in your terminal but you have a complex prompt setup, install font forge and learn to use something like https://github.com/ryanoasis/nerd-fonts/blob/master/font-pat... to patch in the extra characters. This can also solve your "I love this font but want a dotted zero" type problems as well. Small skill investment for a small return over a long period of time. You'll always be using fonts.
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Compiler.nvim: Oficially released (beta)
It is FiraCode Nerd Font Mono:size=16. You can find it here. On arch linux you can just install the nerd-fonts and it's included there.
- Need help: NvChad v2.0 doesn't display font icons correctly with CaskaydiaCove Nerd Font
What are some alternatives?
oh-my-posh - The most customisable and low-latency cross platform/shell prompt renderer
FiraCode - Free monospaced font with programming ligatures
ConPtyShell - ConPtyShell - Fully Interactive Reverse Shell for Windows
Visual Studio Code - Public documentation for Visual Studio Code
powerline - Powerline is a statusline plugin for vim, and provides statuslines and prompts for several other applications, including zsh, bash, tmux, IPython, Awesome and Qtile.
ohmyzsh - 🙃 A delightful community-driven (with 2,300+ contributors) framework for managing your zsh configuration. Includes 300+ optional plugins (rails, git, macOS, hub, docker, homebrew, node, php, python, etc), 140+ themes to spice up your morning, and an auto-update tool so that makes it easy to keep up with the latest updates from the community.
bash-powerline - Powerline-style Bash prompt in pure Bash script. See also https://github.com/riobard/zsh-powerline
MagicTooltips - PowerShell module to display contextual information about the command you're currently entering.
Hack - A typeface designed for source code
DotFetch - An alternative to NeoFetch on Windows
powerlevel10k - A Zsh theme