Welcome to my world. This is a collection of vim, tmux, and zsh configurations. Interested in a video walkthrough of the dotfiles? Check out my talk, vim + tmux.
- Initial Setup and Installation
- ZSH Setup
- Vim and Neovim Setup
- Tmux Configuration
- Git configuration
- OSX configuration
- Homebrew
- Node Installation
If on OSX, you will need to install the XCode CLI tools before continuing. To do so, open a terminal and type
xcode-select --install
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. 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.
Next, the isntall script will perform a check to see if it is running on an OSX machine. If so, it will install Homebrew if it is not currently installed and will install the homebrew packages listed in brew.sh
. Then, it will run installosx.sh
and change some OSX configurations. This file is pretty well documented and so it is advised that you read through and comment out any changes you do not want. Next, the script will call install/nvm.sh
to install Node.js (stable) using nvm.
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
$DOTFILES/zsh
directory for files ending in .zsh and source them - source a
~/.localrc
if it exists so that additional configurations can be made that won't be kept track of in this dotfiles repo. This is good for things like API keys, etc. - Add the
~/bin
and$DOTFILES/bin
directories to the path - Setup NVM, RVM, and hub if they exist
- Set the base16 colorscheme to use for both the terminal (iTerm2) and vim/neovim by exporting the
$THEME
and$BACKGROUND
environment variables - 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 (⇣).
The prompt will also display a ✱ character in the RPROMPT
indicating that there is a suspended job that exists in the background. This is helpful in keeping track of putting vim in the background by pressing CTRL-Z.
vim and neovim should just work once the correct plugins are installed. To install the plugins, you will need to open vim/neovim in the following way:
for vim
vim +PlugInstall
for neovim
nvim +PlugInstall
I am currently using Hack as my default font, which does include Powerline support, so you don't need an additional patched font. In addition to this, I do have nerd-fonts installed and configured to be used for non-ascii characters. If you would prefer not to do this, then simply remove the Plug 'ryanoasis/vim-devicons'
plugin from vim/nvim. Then, I configure the fonts in this way in iTerm2:
- zsh configuration
- vim configuration
- tmux configuration
- git configuration
- osx configuration
- Node.js setup (nvm)
- Homebrew
git clone https://github.com/nicknisi/dotfiles.git ~/.dotfiles
cd ~/.dotfiles
./install.sh
By default, the .zshrc
file will source any file within .dotfiles/zsh
that have the .zsh
extension.
Vim plugins are managed with vim-plug. To install, run vim +PlugInstall
.