fonts
macos-terminal-themes
fonts | macos-terminal-themes | |
---|---|---|
27 | 7 | |
- | 5,812 | |
- | - | |
- | 3.3 | |
- | 7 months ago | |
Swift | ||
- | - |
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.
fonts
- Powerline arrows bugged
-
How to add debian logo in first line where 'neofetch' has been written? Debian Kde.
Look at Powerline Fonts, Nerd Fonts or Font Awesome.
-
Cannot choose Powerline fonts in WSL1 console
I'm now trying to make the Powerline fonts work on Windows. I've tried the two options I get when I right click in a font file ("Install" and "Install for all users") and even restarted the computer, but the new fonts appear everywhere (Windows control panel, LibreOffice Writer, PhpStorm...) except in the WSL console. They're simply missing in the "Font" list. I want "Hack", but I've also tried a few different fonts and none are offered as choice.
-
What are these characters? They look sort of like shurikens
Could also be a patched font. Some fonts use the private use area of unicode to draw glyphs for use in interface. Check out for example these patched fonts for Powerline on GitHub. Powerline is a status line plugin for vim and it uses text to draw the interface. If you download one, drop it on a font visualizer e.g. fontdrop.info you'll see a range of specific glyphs inside the private use area (E000–F8FF). There's even an Ubuntu logo at E0FF.
-
Setting Up an Ubuntu 22.04 Workstation for Software Development and Content Creation
In order to use some of the best themes, you'll need to first install Powerline fonts on your system. I prefer to run the install script directly from their official repository like so:
-
Tilix & Oh-My-Zsh
The theme in the photo above is called agnoster and for that theme, you need the Powerline fonts. Hint: a lot of the themes require these fonts.
-
How to Hack the Raspberry Pi Terminal - TLDR: Using Synthshell, Neofetch and changing sshd login messages to make the terminal more useful (and more fun)
To view the terminal properly from another machine, such as a Windows PC, Apple Mac or Linux machine you will need to install the Powerline fonts (Click here for a link to the powerline fonts).
-
Be friend with your Terminal
But for this particular theme we need a particular font, the Ubuntu Mono. Of course you can download this font as a standard human or again use your terminal by directly clonning the project:
- I just started... turning Cache-Control headers into their own language? Don't worry, when I took another look at this I nuked the local repo and re-cloned it, don't even know if this would work.
-
My messed up my bash shell in Arch. Help me fix it
so I did git clone https://github.com/powerline/fonts.git --depth=1 cd fonts ./install.sh cd .. rm -rf fonts
macos-terminal-themes
-
No_color
You can change the specific color shades to something nicer, but keep the color mapping the same (1=red, 2=green etc.), just like most of these themes: https://github.com/lysyi3m/macos-terminal-themes
- Dracula Theme: a dark theme for 227 different apps
-
"ls: .: Operation not permitted" in ~/Downloads after downloading colour schemes
Now, I've downloaded a load of colorschemes(https://github.com/lysyi3m/macos-terminal-themes), they were in my ~/Downloads first but I've sinced moved the whole master folder to ~. The instructions are to go into themes and open any Example.terminal file, which opens a terminal window with those colours, then go to "Shell" > "Use settings as default". When I do this, or even if I don't do this, I'm not allowed to use the ls command from the ~/Downloads directory at all. Even when I close this, as I did open it as a .terminal file, and reopen the app, when I try ls ~/Downloads I just get:
-
How to customize the Terminal?
If you want to reverse the colors so the text is white with a black background (like in a lot of Linux distros) you can press cmd , to open the preferences then select I believe it is called the pro theme and then click on make default. I use the Homebrew theme which is green on black (because it reminds me of my first Linux computer (a raspi 3b)). Though GitHub has a ton of color schemes https://github.com/lysyi3m/macos-terminal-themes I believe you just open the file and it installs to terminal and you can enable it be same way I said earlier.
-
How I customise my Terminal with Oh My Zsh (macOS)
You can play around with the colours in the Terminal Profiles yourself but I would suggest going with a pre-made theme because they will have considered the constrast and readability of the colours in different scenarios. Here's a list of cool MacOS Terminal Themes.
-
What Terminal Emulator is this?
hah. stay away from r/unixporn. change can be good though. people always like to look at something new, different, and flashy. try a different font? my favorite is Input, with Nerd Font glyphs applied. Look for a new theme, i personally use material-dark. and then you can spend hours tweaking a prompt. powerline10k is my go-to prompt-construction-set.
-
What colours do you use for Terminal and why?
Any colors that suit you. I think dark background is better for your eyes. Your can try more color schemes here. You can use iTerms2 as an alternative to default terminal
What are some alternatives?
inter - The Inter font family
kitty-themes - A collection of themes for kitty terminal 😻
source-code-pro - Monospaced font family for user interface and coding environments
papercolor-theme - :art: Light & Dark Vim color schemes inspired by Google's Material Design
PrusaSlicer - G-code generator for 3D printers (RepRap, Makerbot, Ultimaker etc.)
zenburn-emacs - The Zenburn colour theme ported to Emacs
og-image - Open Graph Image as a Service - generate cards for Twitter, Facebook, Slack, etc
powerline-shell - A beautiful and useful prompt for your shell
source-serif - Typeface for setting text in many sizes, weights, and languages. Designed to complement Source Sans.
base16 - Not a theme, but a framework
uiGradients - 🔴 Beautiful colour gradients for design and code
hyperterm - A terminal built on web technologies