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User Defined Modules

This folder is used to store user defined modules. You can use this folder to add a new module or override any existing module. To override an existing module, make sure that you use the same name for your module as the module you want to override. You can also override the window module for the current and default window.

Creating A New Module

Note

Changes will only be applied after reloading your Tmux configuration by executing tmux source-file ~/.tmux.conf.

You can create a custom module by following the steps outlined below. This can be something you create entirely by yourself or integrating an existing Tmux plugin.

  1. Create a new file in ~/.tmux/plugins/tmux/custom/<module_name>.sh to store the custom module.

    • The file must end in .sh
    • The file does not need to be set as executable.
  2. Copy the following template to this new file. Make sure to replace every instance of <module_name> by the name you chose as filename.

    # If this module depends on an external Tmux plugin, say so in a comment.
    # E.g.: Requires https://github.com/aaronpowell/tmux-weather
    
    show_<module_name>() { # This function name must match the module name!
      local index icon color text module
    
      index=$1 # This variable is used internally by the module loader in order to know the position of this module
    
      icon="$(  get_tmux_option "@catppuccin_<module_name>_icon"  ""           )"
      color="$( get_tmux_option "@catppuccin_<module_name>_color" "$thm_orange" )"
      text="$(  get_tmux_option "@catppuccin_<module_name>_text"  "hello world" )"
    
      module=$( build_status_module "$index" "$icon" "$color" "$text" )
    
      echo "$module"
    }
  3. Add the custom module to the list of modules in .tmux.conf

    set -g @catppuccin_status_modules_right "... <module_name> ..."

Customization

Change the icon to one from Nerd Fonts.

Change the color to one of the official colors, for instance "$thm_cyan", or to a hexadecimal color like "#00ff00".

The text to display can either be:

  • A static text, e.g. "hello world".
  • The output of a command, e.g. "#( date +%T )".
  • The output of a script, e.g. "#( $HOME/my_script.sh )" . Any script will do, e.g. a Bash or Python script that prints some text, but ensure that it is executable: chmod u+x my_script.sh.
  • An existing Tmux plugin, e.g. " #{forecast} " for the Tmux Weather plugin.

Note that the icon and the color can be generated dynamically as well, for instance by having a Bash script echo a hexadecimal color.

To modify how often the modules are updated, add the following to .tmux.conf:

set -g status-interval <number of seconds>

To configure a custom path for your modules, set this option:

set -g @catppuccin_custom_plugin_dir "<path>"