After the initial installation, you can run rcup without the one-time variable
RCRC being set (rcup will symlink the repo's rcrc to ~/.rcrc for future
runs of rcup). See
example.
This command will create symlinks for config files in your home directory.
Setting the RCRC environment variable tells rcup to use standard
configuration options:
Exclude the README.md, README-ES.md and LICENSE files, which are part of
the dotfiles repository but do not need to be symlinked in.
Give precedence to personal overrides which by default are placed in
~/dotfiles-local
Please configure the rcrc file if you'd like to make personal
overrides in a different directory
Update
From time to time you should pull down any updates to these dotfiles, and run
rcup
to link any new files and install new vim plugins. Note You must run
rcup after pulling to ensure that all files in plugins are properly installed,
but you can safely run rcup multiple times so update early and update often!
Make your own customizations
Create a directory for your personal customizations:
mkdir ~/dotfiles-local
Put your customizations in ~/dotfiles-local appended with .local:
~/dotfiles-local/aliases.local
~/dotfiles-local/git_template.local/*
~/dotfiles-local/gitconfig.local
~/dotfiles-local/psqlrc.local (we supply a blank .psqlrc.local to prevent psql from
throwing an error, but you should overwrite the file with your own copy)
~/dotfiles-local/tmux.conf.local
~/dotfiles-local/vimrc.local
~/dotfiles-local/vimrc.bundles.local
~/dotfiles-local/zshrc.local
~/dotfiles-local/zsh/configs/*
For example, your ~/dotfiles-local/aliases.local might look like this:
# Productivity
alias todo='$EDITOR ~/.todo'
Your ~/dotfiles-local/gitconfig.local might look like this:
[alias]
l = log --pretty=colored
[pretty]
colored = format:%Cred%h%Creset %s %Cgreen(%cr) %C(bold blue)%an%Creset
[user]
name = Dan Croak
email = [email protected]
Your ~/dotfiles-local/vimrc.local might look like this:
If you don't wish to install a vim plugin from the default set of vim plugins in
.vimrc.bundles, you can ignore the plugin by calling it out with UnPlug in
your ~/.vimrc.bundles.local.
UnPlug can be used to install your own fork of a plugin or to install a shared
plugin with different custom options.
" Only load vim-coffee-script if a Coffeescript buffer is created
UnPlug 'vim-coffee-script'
Plug 'kchmck/vim-coffee-script', { 'for': 'coffee' }
" Use a personal fork of vim-run-interactive
UnPlug 'vim-run-interactive'
Plug '$HOME/plugins/vim-run-interactive'
To extend your git hooks, create executable scripts in
~/dotfiles-local/git_template.local/hooks/* files.
Your ~/dotfiles-local/zshrc.local might look like this:
# load pyenv if available
if which pyenv &>/dev/null ; then
eval "$(pyenv init -)"
fi
Your ~/dotfiles-local/vimrc.bundles.local might look like this:
Additional zsh configuration can go under the ~/dotfiles-local/zsh/configs directory. This
has two special subdirectories: pre for files that must be loaded first, and
post for files that must be loaded last.
For example, ~/dotfiles-local/zsh/configs/pre/virtualenv makes use of various shell
features which may be affected by your settings, so load it first:
# Load the virtualenv wrapper
. /usr/local/bin/virtualenvwrapper.sh
Setting a key binding can happen in ~/dotfiles-local/zsh/configs/keys:
Some changes, like chpwd, must happen in ~/dotfiles-local/zsh/configs/post/chpwd:
# Show the entries in a directory whenever you cd in
function chpwd {
ls
}
This directory is handy for combining dotfiles from multiple teams; one team
can add the virtualenv file, another keys, and a third chpwd.
The ~/dotfiles-local/zshrc.local is loaded after ~/dotfiles-local/zsh/configs.
vim Configurations
Similarly to the zsh configuration directory as described above, vim
automatically loads all files in the ~/dotfiles-local/vim/plugin directory. This does not
have the same pre or post subdirectory support that our zshrc has.
This is an example ~/dotfiles-local/vim/plugin/c.vim. It is loaded every time vim starts,
regardless of the file name:
# Indent C programs according to BSD style(9)
set cinoptions=:0,t0,+4,(4
autocmd BufNewFile,BufRead *.[ch] setlocal sw=0 ts=8 noet
g with no arguments is git status and with arguments acts like git.
migrate for bin/rails db:migrate db:rollback && bin/rails db:migrate db:test:prepare.
mcd to make a directory and change into it.
replace foo bar **/*.rb to find and replace within a given list of files.
tat to attach to tmux session named the same as the current directory.
v for $VISUAL.
Thanks
Thank you, contributors!
Also, thank you to Corey Haines, Gary Bernhardt, and others for sharing your
dotfiles and other shell scripts from which we derived inspiration for items
in this project.
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