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Dotfiles

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.

Obviously this setup work for me, a JavaScript developer on macOS, 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!

-- nicknisi

The original repo is really cool and I like most of the config. So I changed just a few things.

  1. I like the oh-my-zh, so I go with that.
  2. I changed the Tmux config to an adapted version of gpakosz/.tmux
  3. I added support for Debian based Linux distros

Contents

Initial Setup and Installation

Backup

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.

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/Artem-Schander/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.

Next, the install 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 osx.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, nginx (installed from Homebrew) will be configured with the provided configuration file. If a nginx.conf file already exists in /usr/local/etc, a backup will be made at /usr/local/etc/nginx/nginx.conf.original.

ZSH Setup

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 the c 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...

Prompt

The prompt is meant to be simple while still providing information to the user, particularly about the status of the git project, if the PWD is a git project.

The precmd shows the current working directory in it and the PROMPT shows the git.

Prompt Git Info

The git info shown on the PROMPT displays the current branch name, and whether it is dirty or clean.

Vim and Neovim Setup

Neovim is a fork and drop-in replacement for vim. in most cases, you would not notice a difference between the two, other than Neovim allows plugins to run asynchronously so that they do not freeze the editor, which is the main reason I have switched over to it. Vim and Neovim both use Vimscript and most plugins will work in both (all of the plugins I use do work in both Vim and Neovim). For this reason, they share the same configuration files in this setup. Neovim uses the XDG base directory specification which means it won't look for a .vimrc in your home directory. Instead, its configuration looks like the following:

Vim Neovim
Main Configuratin File ~/.vimrc ~/.config/nvim/init.vim
Configuration directory ~/.vim ~/.config/nvim

Installation

Vim is likely already installed on your system. If using a Mac, MacVim will be installed from Homebrew. Neovim will also be installed from Homebrew by default on a Mac. For other systems, you may need to install Neovim manually. See their web site for more information.

link.sh will symlink the XDG configuration directory into your home directory and will then create symlinks for .vimrc and .vim over to the Neovim configuration so that Vim and Neovim will both be configured in the same way from the same files. The benefit of this configuration is that you only have to maintain a single vim configuration for both, so that if Neovim (which is still alpha software) has issues, you can very seamlessly transition back to vim with no big impact to your productivity.

Inside of .zshrc, the EDITOR shell variable is set to nvim, defaulting to Neovim for editor tasks, such as git commit messages. Additionally, I have aliased vim to nvim in aliases.zsh You can remove this if you would rather not alias the vim command to nvim.

vim and neovim should just work once the correct plugins are installed. To install the plugins, you will need to open Neovim in the following way:

➜ nvim +PlugInstall

Fonts

I am currently using Fira Code as my default font which does not include Powerline support but has pretty nice ligatures (at the time being only supported by iTerm2 nightly build but will be supported from v3.1).

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:

Tmux Configuration

Tmux is a terminal multiplexor which lets you create windows and splits in the terminal that you can attach and detach from. I use it to keep multiple projects open in separate windows and to create an IDE-like environment to work in where I can have my code open in vim/neovim and a shell open to run tests/scripts. Tmux is configured in ~/.tmux.conf.local. This file defines the key bindings, the colors used, the layout of the tmux bar, and what what will be displayed, including the time and date, open windows, tmux session name, computer name, etc.

When tmux starts up, login-shell will be run and if it determines you are running this on macOS, it will call reattach-to-user-namespace, to fix the system clipboard for use inside of tmux.