• Stars
    star
    7,037
  • Rank 5,312 (Top 0.2 %)
  • Language
    Shell
  • License
    MIT License
  • Created about 14 years ago
  • Updated 10 months ago

Reviews

There are no reviews yet. Be the first to send feedback to the community and the maintainers!

Repository Details

@holman does dotfiles

holman does dotfiles

Your dotfiles are how you personalize your system. These are mine.

I was a little tired of having long alias files and everything strewn about (which is extremely common on other dotfiles projects, too). That led to this project being much more topic-centric. I realized I could split a lot of things up into the main areas I used (Ruby, git, system libraries, and so on), so I structured the project accordingly.

If you're interested in the philosophy behind why projects like these are awesome, you might want to read my post on the subject.

topical

Everything's built around topic areas. If you're adding a new area to your forked dotfiles β€” say, "Java" β€” you can simply add a java directory and put files in there. Anything with an extension of .zsh will get automatically included into your shell. Anything with an extension of .symlink will get symlinked without extension into $HOME when you run script/bootstrap.

what's inside

A lot of stuff. Seriously, a lot of stuff. Check them out in the file browser above and see what components may mesh up with you. Fork it, remove what you don't use, and build on what you do use.

components

There's a few special files in the hierarchy.

  • bin/: Anything in bin/ will get added to your $PATH and be made available everywhere.
  • topic/*.zsh: Any files ending in .zsh get loaded into your environment.
  • topic/path.zsh: Any file named path.zsh is loaded first and is expected to setup $PATH or similar.
  • topic/completion.zsh: Any file named completion.zsh is loaded last and is expected to setup autocomplete.
  • topic/install.sh: Any file named install.sh is executed when you run script/install. To avoid being loaded automatically, its extension is .sh, not .zsh.
  • topic/*.symlink: Any file ending in *.symlink gets symlinked into your $HOME. This is so you can keep all of those versioned in your dotfiles but still keep those autoloaded files in your home directory. These get symlinked in when you run script/bootstrap.

install

Run this:

git clone https://github.com/holman/dotfiles.git ~/.dotfiles
cd ~/.dotfiles
script/bootstrap

This will symlink the appropriate files in .dotfiles to your home directory. Everything is configured and tweaked within ~/.dotfiles.

The main file you'll want to change right off the bat is zsh/zshrc.symlink, which sets up a few paths that'll be different on your particular machine.

dot is a simple script that installs some dependencies, sets sane macOS defaults, and so on. Tweak this script, and occasionally run dot from time to time to keep your environment fresh and up-to-date. You can find this script in bin/.

bugs

I want this to work for everyone; that means when you clone it down it should work for you even though you may not have rbenv installed, for example. That said, I do use this as my dotfiles, so there's a good chance I may break something if I forget to make a check for a dependency.

If you're brand-new to the project and run into any blockers, please open an issue on this repository and I'd love to get it fixed for you!

thanks

I forked Ryan Bates' excellent dotfiles for a couple years before the weight of my changes and tweaks inspired me to finally roll my own. But Ryan's dotfiles were an easy way to get into bash customization, and then to jump ship to zsh a bit later. A decent amount of the code in these dotfiles stem or are inspired from Ryan's original project.

More Repositories

1

spark

▁▂▃▅▂▇ in your shell.
Shell
5,968
star
2

boom

Motherfucking TEXT SNIPPETS! On the COMMAND LINE!
Ruby
1,269
star
3

extended-exercise-windows

A list of startups that have employee-friendly terms for exercising your options past 90 days.
1,136
star
4

ama

Ask @holman anything!
722
star
5

left

Left is a clean, whitespace-happy layout for Jekyll.
CSS
536
star
6

spaceman-diff

diff images from the command line
Shell
464
star
7

gifme

Fucking animations. You need them.
Ruby
321
star
8

bubs

β’·β“Šβ’·β’·β“β’Ίβ“ˆ
Ruby
178
star
9

bandwidth-friends

A shell script for macOS that makes sure you are being nice to your nice coffeeshop internet neighbors. πŸ’–
Shell
87
star
10

boastful

A jQuery plugin to trawl Twitter for people linking to you.
JavaScript
82
star
11

hopper

Collection, Analyzation, and BBQing of Ruby community statistics.
Ruby
80
star
12

eponine

A very simple web server interface to shell scripts. Designed for Slack integrations on a Raspberry Pi.
Shell
54
star
13

rapinoe

Parse Keynote files in Ruby.
Ruby
46
star
14

stars

Recent Favstar and Convore stars on your command line.
Ruby
38
star
15

fuck-yeah

fuck yeah nouns
JavaScript
37
star
16

fatigue

Import your Nike+ runs into Garmin Connect.
Ruby
32
star
17

facelette

FACEEEEETIMMEMMEMEMEE
Ruby
28
star
18

this-machine-rebases-branches

it does.
26
star
19

vagranception

BWWWAAAAAAAAAAA
Ruby
22
star
20

tissues

things.app + github issues
Ruby
21
star
21

holmalicious

My mom sends me recipes.
19
star
22

git-hooks

Installable git hooks, a place to collect them
19
star
23

.js

holman's dotjs scripts
JavaScript
19
star
24

shamazing

SHAMAZING HASH ANALYSIS
Ruby
18
star
25

play

Play has moved to:
16
star
26

keep

It makes keeping config information pretty easy.
Ruby
12
star
27

casual

A tiny CAS client for Ruby.
Ruby
6
star
28

two_adium_one_cup

conversation history consolidation for Adium
Ruby
5
star
29

noted

A tiny Rails note search for your beautiful mug, sweetie.
5
star
30

maliciousurl

MALICIOUS MALICIOUS MALICIOUS MALICIOUS
Ruby
4
star
31

holman

holman
Ruby
4
star
32

brightkitey

brightkitey is a cute little Ruby wrapper around Brightkite's API.
Ruby
4
star
33

leftright

Cool replacement for Test::Unit's TestRunner
Ruby
1
star