BREAKING CHANGE: the `zsh-navigation-tools` plugin now bundles the version from the
zdharma-continuum project, which republished the projects that psprint deleted (we
don't yet know yet why). In theory this change doesn't break anything, but be aware
of the change and that the upstream repository now lives somewhere else.
Source: https://github.com/zdharma-continuum/zsh-navigation-tools/commit/67b24e1
This is an improvement (in my opinion) to the `brews` command that prints each leaf formula (in white), followed by its dependencies (in blue), on each line. Compared to the existing flat list of formulae, the new layout is both more compact and more informative, by differentiating leaves from dependencies at a glance.
Screenshot:
<img width="530" src="https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1753319/130641713-b78535c9-e3f5-4dbb-80f8-22bc00e1129d.png">
* Added support for SUSE and derivatives for command-not-found plugin
* Updated command-not-found documentation to list support for SUSE and derivatives
BREAKING CHANGE: the `DEFAULT_PROXY` setting has been renamed to `SHELLPROXY_URL`,
and `CONFIG_PROXY` has been renamed to `SHELLPROXY_CONFIG`. See the plugin README
for more information.
Co-authored-by: Marc Cornellà <hello@mcornella.com>
BREAKING CHANGE: the `hg_prompt_info` function now uses `ZSH_THEME_HG_PROMPT_PREFIX`
and `ZSH_THEME_HG_PROMPT_SUFFIX` variables when displaying branch information, similar
to the `git_prompt_info` function.
Closes#6631
Replaced two different calls of hg with one `hg --id --branch` for retrieving
information whether we're in a repo (will be empty if not), whether the repo is
dirty (revision id will contain "+" if there are uncommitted changed), and the
branch name.
Closes#6197Closes#7929
When calling `bundle install` with `--jobs=<n>`, bundle persists this
argument in `.bundle/config`. If we run `BUNDLE_JOBS=<n> bundle install`
instead, this is not persisted.
Fixes#10425
BREAKING CHANGE: the plugin now checks for the `docker-compose` command instead
of trying whether `docker compose` is a valid command. This means that if the
old command is still installed it will be used instead. To use `docker compose`,
uninstall any old copies of `docker-compose`.
Fixes#10409