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author | Marvin Borner | 2020-03-16 23:33:42 +0100 |
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committer | Marvin Borner | 2020-03-16 23:33:42 +0100 |
commit | 0e9ddbb0bf0cd34500155ea4b03de2e2a38d8ab2 (patch) | |
tree | 719da1c7fe5dabb872fe9ff1582c39b55ccd488e /.oh-my-zsh/lib/theme-and-appearance.zsh | |
parent | e5d38956336ab1be954bdbd12808c5f98f8bd925 (diff) |
Well I'm using Arch again
Diffstat (limited to '.oh-my-zsh/lib/theme-and-appearance.zsh')
-rw-r--r-- | .oh-my-zsh/lib/theme-and-appearance.zsh | 55 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 55 deletions
diff --git a/.oh-my-zsh/lib/theme-and-appearance.zsh b/.oh-my-zsh/lib/theme-and-appearance.zsh deleted file mode 100644 index 96f34aa..0000000 --- a/.oh-my-zsh/lib/theme-and-appearance.zsh +++ /dev/null @@ -1,55 +0,0 @@ -# ls colors -autoload -U colors && colors - -# Enable ls colors -export LSCOLORS="Gxfxcxdxbxegedabagacad" - -# TODO organise this chaotic logic - -if [[ "$DISABLE_LS_COLORS" != "true" ]]; then - # Find the option for using colors in ls, depending on the version - if [[ "$OSTYPE" == netbsd* ]]; then - # On NetBSD, test if "gls" (GNU ls) is installed (this one supports colors); - # otherwise, leave ls as is, because NetBSD's ls doesn't support -G - gls --color -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='gls --color=tty' - elif [[ "$OSTYPE" == openbsd* ]]; then - # On OpenBSD, "gls" (ls from GNU coreutils) and "colorls" (ls from base, - # with color and multibyte support) are available from ports. "colorls" - # will be installed on purpose and can't be pulled in by installing - # coreutils, so prefer it to "gls". - gls --color -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='gls --color=tty' - colorls -G -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='colorls -G' - elif [[ "$OSTYPE" == darwin* ]]; then - # this is a good alias, it works by default just using $LSCOLORS - ls -G . &>/dev/null && alias ls='ls -G' - - # only use coreutils ls if there is a dircolors customization present ($LS_COLORS or .dircolors file) - # otherwise, gls will use the default color scheme which is ugly af - [[ -n "$LS_COLORS" || -f "$HOME/.dircolors" ]] && gls --color -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='gls --color=tty' - else - # For GNU ls, we use the default ls color theme. They can later be overwritten by themes. - if [[ -z "$LS_COLORS" ]]; then - (( $+commands[dircolors] )) && eval "$(dircolors -b)" - fi - - ls --color -d . &>/dev/null && alias ls='ls --color=tty' || { ls -G . &>/dev/null && alias ls='ls -G' } - - # Take advantage of $LS_COLORS for completion as well. - zstyle ':completion:*' list-colors "${(s.:.)LS_COLORS}" - fi -fi - -setopt auto_cd -setopt multios -setopt prompt_subst - -[[ -n "$WINDOW" ]] && SCREEN_NO="%B$WINDOW%b " || SCREEN_NO="" - -# Apply theming defaults -PS1="%n@%m:%~%# " - -# git theming default: Variables for theming the git info prompt -ZSH_THEME_GIT_PROMPT_PREFIX="git:(" # Prefix at the very beginning of the prompt, before the branch name -ZSH_THEME_GIT_PROMPT_SUFFIX=")" # At the very end of the prompt -ZSH_THEME_GIT_PROMPT_DIRTY="*" # Text to display if the branch is dirty -ZSH_THEME_GIT_PROMPT_CLEAN="" # Text to display if the branch is clean |