This is no longer being used. Decided to clean up and start from scratch. The new dotfiles are located at the same old url: git://github.com/NickClark/dotfiles. Much is the same and installation is slightly simpler.
These are config files to set up a system the way I like it. Most of this readme is left as Ryan Bates created it. Thanks Ryan! This also uses oh-my-zsh and akitas vimfiles which are included as submodules.
git clone git://github.com/NickClark/dotfiles_old ~/.dotfiles_old cd ~/.dotfiles git submodule init git submodule update rake install Note: you may also have to go into the vim folder and call repeat steps 3 and 4 ie: git submodule init git submodule update
I am running on Mac OS X, but it will likely work on Linux as well with minor fiddling. I primarily use zsh, but this includes some older bash files as well. If you would like to switch to zsh, you can do so with the following command.
chsh -s /bin/zsh
Refer to the appropriate submodules README on github for feature listings and instructions.
Keys you should know about in vim: p - open NerdTree b - open Buffer Explorer t - open FuzzyFinder
I normally place all of my coding projects in ~/code, so this directory can easily be accessed (and tab completed) with the “c” command.
c railsca<tab>
There is also an “h” command which behaves similar, but acts on the home path.
h doc<tab>
Tab completion is also added to rake and cap commands:
rake db:mi<tab> cap de<tab>
To speed things up, the results are cached in local .rake_tasks~ and .cap_tasks~. It is smart enough to expire the cache automatically in most cases, but you can simply remove the files to flush the cache.
There are a few key bindings set. Many of these require option to be set as the meta key. Option-left/right arrow will move cursor by word, and control-left/right will move to beginning and end of line. Control-option-N will open a new tab with the current directory under Mac OS X Terminal.
If you’re using git, you’ll notice the current branch name shows up in the prompt while in a git repository.
If you’re using Rails, you’ll find some handy aliases (below). You can also use show_log and hide_log in script/console to show the log inline.
ss # script/server sc # script/console sg # script/generate a # autotest tlog # tail -f log/development.log rst # touch tmp/restart.txt migrate # rake db:migrate db:test:clone scaffold # script/generate nifty_scaffold
See the other aliases in ~/.zsh/aliases
If there are some shell configuration settings which you want secure or specific to one system, place it into a ~/.localrc file. This will be loaded automatically if it exists.
There are several features enabled in Ruby’s irb including history and completion. Many convenience methods are added as well such as “ri” which can be used to get inline documentation in IRB. See irbrc and railsrc files for details.