# Config for Powerlevel10k with lean prompt style. Doesn't require a Powerline font. # The color scheme is suitable for dark terminal background. # # Once you've installed Powerlevel10k, run these commands to apply lean style. # # curl -fsSL -O ~/p10k-lean.zsh https://raw.githubusercontent.com/romkatv/powerlevel10k/master/config/p10k-lean.zsh # echo 'source ~/p10k-lean.zsh' >>! ~/.zshrc # # To customize your prompt, open ~/p10k-lean.zsh in your favorite text editor, change it and # restart ZSH. The file is well-documented. # # Tip: Looking for a nice color? Here's a one-liner to print colormap. # # for i in {0..255}; do print -Pn "%${i}F${(l:3::0:)i}%f " ${${(M)$((i%8)):#7}:+$'\n'}; done if [[ -o 'aliases' ]]; then # Temporarily disable aliases. 'builtin' 'unsetopt' 'aliases' local p10k_lean_restore_aliases=1 else local p10k_lean_restore_aliases=0 fi () { emulate -L zsh setopt no_unset # The list of segments shown on the left. Fill it with the most important segments. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_LEFT_PROMPT_ELEMENTS=( # =========================[ Line #1 ]========================= # os_icon # os identifier dir # current directory vcs # git status # =========================[ Line #2 ]========================= newline prompt_char # prompt symbol ) # The list of segments shown on the right. Fill it with less important segments. # Right prompt on the last prompt line (where you are typing your commands) gets # automatically hidden when the input line reaches it. Right prompt above the # last prompt line gets hidden if it would overlap with left prompt. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_RIGHT_PROMPT_ELEMENTS=( # =========================[ Line #1 ]========================= status # exit code of the last command command_execution_time # duration of the last command background_jobs # presence of background jobs # virtualenv # python virtual environment (https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html) # anaconda # conda environment (https://conda.io/) # pyenv # python environment (https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv) # nodenv # node.js version from nodenv (https://github.com/nodenv/nodenv) # nvm # node.js version from nvm (https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm) # nodeenv # node.js environment (https://github.com/ekalinin/nodeenv) # node_version # node.js version # kubecontext # current kubernetes context (https://kubernetes.io/) # nordvpn # nordvpn connection status, linux only (https://nordvpn.com/) context # user@host # =========================[ Line #2 ]========================= newline # public_ip # public IP address # battery # internal battery # time # current time ) # Basic style options that define the overall look of your prompt. You probably don't want to # change them. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BACKGROUND= # transparent background typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_{LEFT,RIGHT}_{LEFT,RIGHT}_WHITESPACE= # no surrounding whitespace typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_RPROMPT_ON_NEWLINE=false # align the first left/right lines typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_{LEFT,RIGHT}_SUBSEGMENT_SEPARATOR=' ' # separate segments with a space typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_{LEFT,RIGHT}_SEGMENT_SEPARATOR= # no end-of-line symbol # To disable default icons for all segments, set POWERLEVEL9K_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION=''. # # To enable default icons for all segments, don't define POWERLEVEL9K_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION # or set it to '${P9K_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER}'. # # To enable default icons for one segment (e.g., dir), set # POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION='${P9K_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER}'. # # To assign a specific icon to one segment (e.g., dir), set # POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION='⭐'. # # To assign a specific icon to a segment in a given state (e.g., dir in state NOT_WRITABLE), # set POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_NOT_WRITABLE_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION='⭐'. # # When a segment is displaying its default icon, in addition to being able to chage it with # VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION as described above, you can also change it with an override # such as POWERLEVEL9K_LOCK_ICON='⭐'. This will change the icon in every segment that uses # LOCK_ICON as default icon. If this paragraph looks confusing, forget what it says. # # Note: Many default icons cannot be displayed with system fonts. You'll need to install a # Powerline font to use them. See POWERLEVEL9K_MODE below. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION= # This option doesn't make a difference unless you've enabled default icons for all or some # prompt segments (see POWERLEVEL9K_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION above). Default icons depend on # the value of POWERLEVEL9K_MODE. For example, LOCK_ICON can be printed as $'\uE0A2', $'\uE138' # or $'\uF023' depending on POWERLEVEL9K_MODE. The correct value of this parameter depends on # the provider of the font your terminal is using. # # Font Provider | POWERLEVEL9K_MODE # ---------------------------------+------------------- # Powerline | powerline # Font Awesome | awesome-fontconfig # Adobe Source Code Pro | awesome-fontconfig # Source Code Pro | awesome-fontconfig # Awesome-Terminal Fonts (regular) | awesome-fontconfig # Awesome-Terminal Fonts (patched) | awesome-patched # Nerd Fonts | nerdfont-complete typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_MODE=nerdfont-complete # When set to true, icons appear before content on both sides of the prompt. When set # to false, icons go after content. If not set, icons go before content in the left prompt # and after content in the right prompt. # # You can also override it for a specific segment: # # POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ICON_BEFORE_CONTENT=false # # Or for specific segment in specific state: # # POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_NOT_WRITABLE_ICON_BEFORE_CONTENT=false typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_ICON_BEFORE_CONTENT=true # Add an empty line before each prompt. If you set it to false, you might want to # set POWERLEVEL9K_SHOW_RULER=true or POWERLEVEL9K_MULTILINE_FIRST_PROMPT_GAP_CHAR='·' below. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_ADD_NEWLINE=true # Ruler, a.k.a. the horizontal line before each prompt. If you set it to true, you'll # probably want to set POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_ADD_NEWLINE=false above and # POWERLEVEL9K_MULTILINE_FIRST_PROMPT_GAP_CHAR=' ' below. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_SHOW_RULER=false typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_RULER_CHAR='─' # reasonable alternative: '·' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_RULER_FOREGROUND=237 # Filler between left and right prompt on the first prompt line. You can set it to '·' or '─' # to make it easier to see the alignment between left and right prompt and to separate prompt # from command output. It serves the same purpose as ruler (see above) without increasing # the number of prompt lines. You'll probably want to set POWERLEVEL9K_SHOW_RULER=false # if using this. You might also like POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_ADD_NEWLINE=false for more compact # prompt. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_MULTILINE_FIRST_PROMPT_GAP_CHAR=' ' if [[ $POWERLEVEL9K_MULTILINE_FIRST_PROMPT_GAP_CHAR != ' ' ]]; then # The color of the filler. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_MULTILINE_FIRST_PROMPT_GAP_FOREGROUND=237 # Add a space between the end of left prompt and the filler. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_LEFT_PROMPT_LAST_SEGMENT_END_SYMBOL=' ' # Add a space between the filler and the start of right prompt. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_RIGHT_PROMPT_FIRST_SEGMENT_START_SYMBOL=' ' # Start filler from the edge of the screen if there are no left segments on the first line. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_EMPTY_LINE_LEFT_PROMPT_FIRST_SEGMENT_END_SYMBOL='%{%}' # End filler on the edge of the screen if there are no right segments on the first line. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_EMPTY_LINE_RIGHT_PROMPT_FIRST_SEGMENT_START_SYMBOL='%{%}' fi #################################[ os_icon: os identifier ]################################## # OS identifier color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_OS_ICON_FOREGROUND=212 # Display this icon instead of the default. # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_OS_ICON_CONTENT_EXPANSION='⭐' ################################[ prompt_char: prompt symbol ]################################ # Green prompt symbol if the last command succeeded. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_OK_{VIINS,VICMD,VIVIS}_FOREGROUND=76 # Red prompt symbol if the last command failed. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_ERROR_{VIINS,VICMD,VIVIS}_FOREGROUND=196 # Default prompt symbol. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIINS_CONTENT_EXPANSION='❯' # Prompt symbol in command vi mode. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VICMD_CONTENT_EXPANSION='❮' # Prompt symbol in visual vi mode. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIVIS_CONTENT_EXPANSION='Ⅴ' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_LEFT_PROMPT_LAST_SEGMENT_END_SYMBOL='' ##################################[ dir: current directory ]################################## # Default current directory color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_FOREGROUND=12 # If directory is too long, shorten some of its segments to the shortest possible unique # prefix. The shortened directory can be tab-completed to the original. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_SHORTEN_STRATEGY=truncate_to_unique # Replace removed segment suffixes with this symbol. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_SHORTEN_DELIMITER= # Color of the shortened directory segments. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_SHORTENED_FOREGROUND=4 # Color of the anchor directory segments. Anchor segments are never shortened. The first # segment is always an anchor. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_ANCHOR_FOREGROUND=39 # Display anchor directory segments in bold. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_ANCHOR_BOLD=true # Don't shorten directories that contain files matching this pattern. They are anchors. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_SHORTEN_FOLDER_MARKER='(.shorten_folder_marker|.bzr|CVS|.git|.hg|.svn|.terraform|.citc)' # Don't shorten this many last directory segments. They are anchors. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_SHORTEN_DIR_LENGTH=1 # Shorten directory if it's longer than this even if there is space for it. The value can # be either absolute (e.g., '80') or a percentage of terminal width (e.g, '50%'). If empty, # directory will be shortened only when prompt doesn't fit. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_MAX_LENGTH=80 # If set to true, embed a hyperlink into the directory. Useful for quickly # opening a directory in the file manager simply by clicking the link. # Can also be handy when the directory is shortened, as it allows you to see # the full directory that was used in previous commands. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_HYPERLINK=false # Enable special styling for non-writable directories. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_SHOW_WRITABLE=true # Show this icon when the current directory is not writable. POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_SHOW_WRITABLE # above must be set to true for this parameter to have effect. # POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_NOT_WRITABLE_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION='⭐' # POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_CLASSES allows you to specify custom icons for different directories. # It must be an array with 3 * N elements. Each triplet consists of: # # 1. A pattern against which the current directory is matched. Matching is done with # extended_glob option enabled. # 2. Directory class for the purpose of styling. # 3. Icon. # # Triplets are tried in order. The first triplet whose pattern matches $PWD wins. If there # are no matches, the directory will have no icon. # # Example: # # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_CLASSES=( # '~/work(/*)#' WORK '(╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻' # '~(/*)#' HOME '⌂' # '*' DEFAULT '') # # With these settings, the current directory in the prompt may look like this: # # (╯°□°)╯︵ ┻━┻ ~/work/projects/important/urgent # # Or like this: # # ⌂ ~/best/powerlevel10k # # You can also set different colors for directories of different classes. # # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_WORK_FOREGROUND=12 # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_WORK_SHORTENED_FOREGROUND=4 # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_WORK_ANCHOR_FOREGROUND=39 # # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_DIR_CLASSES=() #####################################[ vcs: git status ]###################################### # Git status: feature:master#tag ⇣42⇡42 *42 merge ~42 +42 !42 ?42. # We are using parameters defined by the gitstatus plugin. See reference: # https://github.com/romkatv/gitstatus/blob/master/gitstatus.plugin.zsh. local vcs='' # 'feature' or '@72f5c8a' if not on a branch. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_LOCAL_BRANCH:+%76F${(g::)POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_BRANCH_ICON}${VCS_STATUS_LOCAL_BRANCH//\%/%%}}' vcs+=':-%f@%76F${VCS_STATUS_COMMIT[1,8]}}' # ':master' if the tracking branch name differs from local branch. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_REMOTE_BRANCH:#$VCS_STATUS_LOCAL_BRANCH}:+%f:%76F${VCS_STATUS_REMOTE_BRANCH//\%/%%}}' # '#tag' if on a tag. vcs+='${VCS_STATUS_TAG:+%f#%76F${VCS_STATUS_TAG//\%/%%}}' # ⇣42 if behind the remote. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_COMMITS_BEHIND:#0}:+ %76F⇣${VCS_STATUS_COMMITS_BEHIND}}' # ⇡42 if ahead of the remote; no leading space if also behind the remote: ⇣42⇡42. # If you want '⇣42 ⇡42' instead, replace '${${(M)VCS_STATUS_COMMITS_BEHIND:#0}:+ }' with ' '. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_COMMITS_AHEAD:#0}:+${${(M)VCS_STATUS_COMMITS_BEHIND:#0}:+ }%76F⇡${VCS_STATUS_COMMITS_AHEAD}}' # *42 if have stashes. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_STASHES:#0}:+ %76F*${VCS_STATUS_STASHES}}' # 'merge' if the repo is in an unusual state. vcs+='${VCS_STATUS_ACTION:+ %196F${VCS_STATUS_ACTION//\%/%%}}' # ~42 if have merge conflicts. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_NUM_CONFLICTED:#0}:+ %196F~${VCS_STATUS_NUM_CONFLICTED}}' # +42 if have staged changes. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_NUM_STAGED:#0}:+ %11F+${VCS_STATUS_NUM_STAGED}}' # !42 if have unstaged changes. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_NUM_UNSTAGED:#0}:+ %11F!${VCS_STATUS_NUM_UNSTAGED}}' # ?42 if have untracked files. vcs+='${${VCS_STATUS_NUM_UNTRACKED:#0}:+ %12F?${VCS_STATUS_NUM_UNTRACKED}}' # If P9K_CONTENT is not empty, leave it unchanged. It's either "loading" or from vcs_info. vcs="\${P9K_CONTENT:-$vcs}" # Branch icon. Set this parameter to '\uF126 ' for the popular Powerline branch icon. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_BRANCH_ICON= # Disable the default Git status formatting. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_DISABLE_GITSTATUS_FORMATTING=true # Install our own Git status formatter. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_{CLEAN,UNTRACKED,MODIFIED}_CONTENT_EXPANSION=$vcs # When Git status is being refreshed asynchronously, display the last known repo status in grey. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_LOADING_CONTENT_EXPANSION=${${vcs//\%f}//\%<->F} typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_LOADING_FOREGROUND=244 # Enable counters for staged, unstaged, etc. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_{STAGED,UNSTAGED,UNTRACKED,COMMITS_AHEAD,COMMITS_BEHIND}_MAX_NUM=-1 # Show status of repositories of these types. You can add svn and/or hg if you are # using them. If you do, your prompt may become slow even when your current directory # isn't in an svn or hg reposotiry. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_BACKENDS=(git) # These settings are used for respositories other than Git or when gitstatusd fails and # Powerlevel10k has to fall back to using vcs_info. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_{CLEAN,MODIFIED,UNTRACKED}_FOREGROUND=76 typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_REMOTE_BRANCH_ICON=':' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_COMMIT_ICON='@' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_INCOMING_CHANGES_ICON='⇣' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_OUTGOING_CHANGES_ICON='⇡' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_STASH_ICON='*' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_TAG_ICON=$'%{\b#%}' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_UNTRACKED_ICON=$'%{\b?%}' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_UNSTAGED_ICON=$'%{\b!%}' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VCS_STAGED_ICON=$'%{\b+%}' ##########################[ status: exit code of the last command ]########################### # Enable OK_PIPE, ERROR_PIPE and ERROR_SIGNAL status states to allow us to enable, disable and # style them independently from the regular OK and ERROR state. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_EXTENDED_STATES=true # Don't show status on success. prompt_char already indicates success with green color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_OK=false # Don't show status when it's just an error code (e.g., '1'). prompt_char already indicates errors # with red color and error codes aren't interesting enough to waste prompt real estate on them. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ERROR=false typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ERROR_FOREGROUND=9 # Show status when the last command was terminated by a signal. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ERROR_SIGNAL=true typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ERROR_SIGNAL_FOREGROUND=9 # Use terse signal names: "INT" instead of "SIGINT(2)". typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_VERBOSE_SIGNAME=false # Show status when a pipe command fails and the overall exit status is non-zero. It may look # like this: 0|1. prompt_char is red in this case. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ERROR_PIPE=true typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ERROR_PIPE_FOREGROUND=9 # Show status when a pipe command fails and the overall exit status is zero. It may look # like this: 1|0. prompt_char is green in this case. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_OK_PIPE=true typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_OK_PIPE_FOREGROUND=9 # Don't show status unless the last command was terminated by a signal. Your prompt symbol # (prompt_char) indicates error by turning red. Error codes aren't usually interesting but # signals are. This shows signals as "INT", "ABORT", "KILL", etc. You can remove this parameter # for more verbose output. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_STATUS_ERROR_CONTENT_EXPANSION='${${P9K_CONTENT#SIG}//[!A-Z]}' ###################[ command_execution_time: duration of the last command ]################### # Show duration of the last command if takes longer than this many seconds. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_COMMAND_EXECUTION_TIME_THRESHOLD=3 # Show this many fractional digits. Zero means round to seconds. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_COMMAND_EXECUTION_TIME_PRECISION=0 # Execution time color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_COMMAND_EXECUTION_TIME_FOREGROUND=101 # Duration format: 1d 2h 3m 4s. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_COMMAND_EXECUTION_TIME_FORMAT='d h m s' #######################[ background_jobs: presence of background jobs ]####################### # Don't show the number of background jobs. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BACKGROUND_JOBS_VERBOSE=false # Icon to show when there are background jobs. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BACKGROUND_JOBS_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION='⇶' # Background jobs icon color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BACKGROUND_JOBS_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_COLOR=2 ##########[ nordvpn: nordvpn connection status, linux only (https://nordvpn.com/) ]########### # NordVPN connection indicator color when connected. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NORDVPN_CONNECTED_FOREGROUND=4 # NordVPN connection indicator color when not connected. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NORDVPN_{DISCONNECTED,CONNECTING,DISCONNECTING}_FOREGROUND=3 # Uncomment these two lines to hide NordVPN connection indicator when not connected. # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NORDVPN_{DISCONNECTED,CONNECTING,DISCONNECTING}_CONTENT_EXPANSION= # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NORDVPN_{DISCONNECTED,CONNECTING,DISCONNECTING}_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION= ####################################[ context: user@host ]#################################### # Context format: user@host. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_CONTEXT_TEMPLATE='%n@%m' # Default context color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_CONTEXT_FOREGROUND=244 # Context color when running with privileges. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_CONTEXT_ROOT_FOREGROUND=11 # Don't show context unless running with privileges on in SSH. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_CONTEXT_{DEFAULT,SUDO}_{CONTENT,VISUAL_IDENTIFIER}_EXPANSION= typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_ALWAYS_SHOW_CONTEXT=true ###[ virtualenv: python virtual environment (https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html) ]### # Python virtual environment color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VIRTUALENV_FOREGROUND=6 # Show Python version next to the virtual environment name. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VIRTUALENV_SHOW_PYTHON_VERSION=true # Separate environment name from Python version only with a space. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_VIRTUALENV_{LEFT,RIGHT}_DELIMITER= #####################[ anaconda: conda environment (https://conda.io/) ]###################### # Anaconda environment color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_ANACONDA_FOREGROUND=6 # Show Python version next to the anaconda environment name. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_ANACONDA_SHOW_PYTHON_VERSION=true # Separate environment name from Python version only with a space. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_ANACONDA_{LEFT,RIGHT}_DELIMITER= ################[ pyenv: python environment (https://github.com/pyenv/pyenv) ]################ # Pyenv color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PYENV_FOREGROUND=6 # Don't show the current Python version if it's the same as global. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PYENV_PROMPT_ALWAYS_SHOW=false ##########[ nodenv: node.js version from nodenv (https://github.com/nodenv/nodenv) ]########## # Nodenv color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NODENV_FOREGROUND=2 # Don't show node version if it's the same as global: $(nodenv version-name) == $(nodenv global). typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NODENV_PROMPT_ALWAYS_SHOW=false ##############[ nvm: node.js version from nvm (https://github.com/nvm-sh/nvm) ]############### # Nvm color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NVM_FOREGROUND=2 ############[ nodeenv: node.js environment (https://github.com/ekalinin/nodeenv) ]############ # Nodeenv color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NODEENV_FOREGROUND=2 ##############################[ node_version: node.js version ]############################### # Node version color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_NODE_VERSION_FOREGROUND=2 # Show node version only when in a directory tree containing package.json. typeset -g P9K_NODE_VERSION_PROJECT_ONLY=true #############[ kubecontext: current kubernetes context (https://kubernetes.io/) ]############# # Kubernetes context classes for the purpose of using different colors with # different contexts. # # POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_CLASSES is an array with even number of elements. # The first element in each pair defines a pattern against which the current # kubernetes context (in the format it is displayed in the prompt) gets matched. # The second element defines the context class. Patterns are tried in order. # The first match wins. # # For example, if your current kubernetes context is "deathray-testing", its # class is TEST because "deathray-testing" doesn't match the pattern '*prod*' # but does match '*test*'. Hence it'll be shown with the color of # $POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_TEST_FOREGROUND. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_CLASSES=( # '*prod*' PROD # These values are examples that are unlikely # '*test*' TEST # to match your needs. Customize them as needed. '*' DEFAULT) # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_PROD_FOREGROUND=1 # typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_TEST_FOREGROUND=2 typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_DEFAULT_FOREGROUND=3 # Kubernetes context too long? You can shorten it by defining an expansion. The original # Kubernetes context that you see in your prompt is stored in ${P9K_CONTENT} when # the expansion is evaluated. To remove everything up to and including the last '/', # set POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_CONTENT_EXPANSION='${P9K_CONTENT##*/}'. This is just, # an example which isn't necessarily the right expansion for you. Parameter expansions # are very flexible and fast, too. See reference: # http://zsh.sourceforge.net/Doc/Release/Expansion.html#Parameter-Expansion. typeset POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_CONTENT_EXPANSION='${P9K_CONTENT}' # Show the trailing "/default" in kubernetes context. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_KUBECONTEXT_SHOW_DEFAULT_NAMESPACE=true ###############################[ public_ip: public IP address ]############################### # Public IP color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PUBLIC_IP_FOREGROUND=144 ################################[ battery: internal battery ]################################# # Show battery in red when it's below this level and not connected to power supply. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_LOW_THRESHOLD=20 typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_LOW_FOREGROUND=1 # Show battery in green when it's charging. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_CHARGING_FOREGROUND=2 # Show battery in yellow when not connected to power supply. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_DISCONNECTED_FOREGROUND=3 # Battery pictograms going from low to high level of charge. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_STAGES='▁▂▃▄▅▆▇' # Display battery pictogram on black background. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER_EXPANSION='%0K${P9K_VISUAL_IDENTIFIER}%k' # Don't show battery when it's fully charged and connected to power supply. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_CHARGED_{CONTENT,VISUAL_IDENTIFIER}_EXPANSION= # Don't show the remaining time to charge/discharge. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_BATTERY_VERBOSE=false ####################################[ time: current time ]#################################### # Current time color. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_TIME_FOREGROUND=66 # Format for the current time: 09:51:02. See `man 3 strftime`. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_TIME_FORMAT='%D{%H:%M:%S}' # If set to true, time will update when you hit enter. This way prompts for the past # commands will contain the start times of their commands as opposed to the default # behavior where they contain the end times of their preceding commands. typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_TIME_UPDATE_ON_COMMAND=false } (( ! p10k_lean_restore_aliases )) || setopt aliases 'builtin' 'unset' 'p10k_lean_restore_aliases'