4.4 KiB
My P(ersonal) C(omputer) Settings
I'm documenting this primarily for personal use. This reposity contains shell configs, vim configs, emacs configs, a list of commonly used applications, and other items.
Ironically, I prefer to use a Mac as my personal computer, so hopefully the name, pc_settings
isn't misleading.
The overall goal of this repository is to reduce the time it takes to adopt a new computer and equip it with the necessary tooling to do meaningful work.
Neovim
The following snippet fixes the <C-h>
issue in neovim on macOS.
$ infocmp $TERM | sed 's/kbs=^[hH]/kbs=\\177/' > $TERM.ti
$ tic $TERM.ti
True Color and Italics in tmux and vim
TrueColor
Note: make sure that the terminal you are using supports TrueColor (hint: recent version of iTerm2 do). Also make sure that the tmux version you are using supports TrueColor (hint: versions north of 2.2 should).
At each step of the way, test TrueColor using the following shell pipeline (hint: the gradients should be smooth):
$ curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/JohnMorales/dotfiles/master/colors/24-bit-color.sh | bash
- Terminal: recent versions of iTerm 2 should support TrueColor
- Tmux: versions 2.2 and after should support TrueColor
- NeoVim: recent versions of NeoVim should support TrueColor
Enable TrueColor in your ~/.vimrc
(already done in this repository):
set termguicolors
Enable TrueColor in your ~/.tmux.conf
(already done in this repository):
NOTE: This may conflict with the setting for italics. Need to verify to confirm / disconfirm this (pending).
set -ga terminal-overrides ",xterm-256color-italic:Tc"
Italics
In the file /configs/.tmux.conf
there is a line to add italics support to tmux:
set -g default-terminal "tmux-256color-italic"
The $TERM
entry, tmux-256color-italic
, will be unavailable until you add the file, /configs/tmux-256color-italic
, to your terminal database. You can do this with the following command:
$ tic ~/pc_settings/configs/tmux-256color-italic
Ligature Support
To support ligatures make sure Hasklig is installed (link at the bottom). Ensure that you are using an iTerm 2 build that supports ligatures. With both of these tasks completed, ligatures should function in Neovim.
Commonly used applications
- Emacs OS X - text editor
- sublime text - text editor
- webstorm - web IDE
- pycharm - python IDE
- dash - provides quick access to offline documentation (use with Alfred)
- Alfred - replaces macOS Spotlight and integrates with external Apps like Dash
- iterm - substitute for Terminal application
- homebrew - necessary for procuring shell applications
- spectacle - resize and move your windows with keyboard shortcuts
- iterm - substitute for Terminal application
- Fish Shell - a more modern alternative to Bash or Zsh
- oh my zsh - a full suite of z-shell extensions
- docker - for running containers and virtual environments
- mou - markdown editor
- f.lux - modulates the blue amount from the screen throughout the day
Sublime Text Packages
- SublimeLinter - lints files
- SublimeLinter-contrib-eslint - lints using eslint
- Oceanic Next Theme - buffer and editor theme
- Vintageous - extended Vim key-binding support
- Vintageous-Origami - extended Vintageous support for window pane mgt (ctrl + w)
"vintageous_use_ctrl_keys": true
- Origami - dep. of Vintageous-Origami (see above)
- babel-sublime - supports JSNext features
- SublimeCodeIntel - robust autocomplete engine
- PackageResourceViewer - quickly view / edit installed Sublime Packages to enhance customization options
- SidebarEnhancements - extensions for Sublime Text's sidebar
- SublimeREPL - convenient REPL for ST
- FoldComments - collapse comments with keystrokes
Sublime preferences (user)
Sublime keybindings (user)
other notes
- Install Hasklig for ligature support in Elm, Elixir, etc
- Install FiraCode for ligature support
- Install Operator Mono for expressive Italics
- Install powerline fonts
- add Adobe Source Code Pro font for shell and text editors
- increase trackpad / mouse speed to maximum levels