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Zsh for Humans

A turnkey configuration for Zsh that aims to work really well out of the box. It combines the best Zsh plugins into a coherent whole that feels like a finished product rather than a DIY starter kit.

If you want a great shell that just works, this project is for you.

Table of contents

Features

Installation

Run this command in bash, zsh, or sh:

if command -v curl >/dev/null 2>&1; then
  sh -c "$(curl -fsSL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/romkatv/zsh4humans/v5/install)"
else
  sh -c "$(wget -O- https://raw.githubusercontent.com/romkatv/zsh4humans/v5/install)"
fi

The installer backs up the existing Zsh startup files, creates new ones, installs everything necessary for Zsh for Humans, starts a new shell, and configures it as login shell. It asks for confirmation on every step so that you are always in control. Installation requires curl or wget. It does not require git, zsh, sudo or anything else.

<details> <summary>Recording of the installation process</summary>

Zsh for Humans installation

</details>

Try it in Docker

Try Zsh for Humans in a Docker container. You can safely install additional software and make any changes to the file system. Once you exit Zsh, the image is deleted.

Caveats

Zsh for Humans is not a good choice for users who prefer vi bindings in their shell.

Zsh for Humans has very little documentation. There is no list of configuration options it recognizes and no description of what those options do.

Usage

If you've used Zsh, Bash or Fish before, Zsh for Humans should feel familiar. For the most part everything works as you would expect.

Accepting autosuggestions

All key bindings that move the cursor can accept command autosuggestions. For example, moving the cursor one word to the right will accept that word from the autosuggestion. The whole autosuggestion can be accepted without moving the cursor with <kbd>Alt+M</kbd>/<kbd>Option+M</kbd>.

Autosuggestions in Zsh for Humans are provided by zsh-autosuggestions. See its homepage for more information.

Completing commands

When completing with <kbd>Tab</kbd>, suggestions come from completion functions. For most commands completion functions are provided by Zsh proper. Additional completion functions are contributed by zsh-completions. See its homepage for the list of commands it supports.

Ambiguous completions automatically start fzf. Accept the desired completion with <kbd>Enter</kbd>. You can also select more than one completion with <kbd>Ctrl+Space</kbd> or all of them with <kbd>Ctrl+A</kbd>.

Searching command history

<kbd>Up</kbd> and <kbd>Down</kbd> keys fetch commands from history that contain what you've already typed on the command line. For example, if you press <kbd>Up</kbd> after typing grep, you'll see the last executed command that contains grep.

<kbd>Ctrl+R</kbd> starts fzf to search over history.

Interactive search with fzf

Several UI elements in Zsh for Humans use fzf to quickly select an item from a potentially large list of candidates. You can type multiple search terms delimited by spaces. For example:

^music .mp3$ sbtrkt !fire
TokenMatch typeDescription
wildsubstringItems with the substring wild
^musicprefixItems that start with music
.mp3$suffixItems that end with .mp3
!wildinverse substringItems without the substring wild
!^musicinverse prefixItems that do not start with music
!.mp3$inverse suffixItems that do not end with .mp3

A single bar (|) acts as an OR operator. For example, the following query matches entries that start with core and end with either go, rb, or py.

^core go$ | rb$ | py$

See fzf homepage for more information.

SSH

SSH teleportation

When you connect to a remote host over SSH, your local Zsh for Humans environment can be teleported over to it. The first login to a remote host may take some time. After that it's as fast as normal ssh.

Search for "ssh" in your ~/.zshrc for information on how to enable and configure SSH teleportation.

Customization

You can (and should) edit ~/.zshrc to customize your shell. It's a very good idea to read through the whole file to see which customization options are in there and to flip some of them to your liking.

When adding your customizations, put them next to the existing lines that do similar things. The default ~/.zshrc contains the following types of customizations that should serve as examples:

Customizing prompt

Prompt in Zsh for Humans is provided by Powerlevel10k. Run p10k configure to access its interactive configuration wizard. Further customization can be done by editing ~/.p10k*.zsh files. There can be more than one configuration file to account for terminals with limited capabilities. Most users will ever only see ~/.p10k.zsh. When in doubt, consult $POWERLEVEL9K_CONFIG_FILE. This parameter is set by Zsh for Humans and it always points to the Powerlevel10k config file currently in use.

See Powerlevel10k homepage for more information.

Customizing appearance

Different parts of Zsh for Humans UI are rendered by different projects.

Zsh for Humans

Everything within the highlighted areas on the screenshot is prompt. It is produced by Powerlevel10k. See Customizing prompt.

The listing of files produced by ls command is colored by ls itself. Different commands have different ways of customizing their output, and even different version of ls have different flags and environment variables related to colors. Zsh for Humans enables colored output for common commands such as ls and grep. For further customization consult documentation of the respective command.

echo hello is the current command being typed. Syntax highlighting for it is provided by zsh-syntax-highlighting. See its homepage for documentation on how to customize it.

After echo hello you can see world in grey. This is not a part of the command, so pressing <kbd>Enter</kbd> will print only hello but not world. The latter is an autosuggestion provided by zsh-autosuggestions that you can accept in part or in full. It comes from command history and it's a great productivity booster. See zsh-autosuggestions homepage for more information.

Last but not least, your terminal has a say about the appearance of everything that runs within it. The base colors, numbered from 0 to 15, can look differently in different terminals and even in the same terminal with different settings. Most modern terminals support themes, color palettes or color schemes that allow you to quickly change base colors. If colors in your terminal look unpleasant, try a different theme. Note that colors with codes above 15, as well as colors specified as RGB triplets, don't get affected by terminal themes. They look the same everywhere.

Additional Zsh startup files

When you start Zsh, it automatically sources ~/.zshenv and ~/.zshrc. The former bootstraps Zsh for Humans, the latter is your personal config. It is strongly recommended to keep all shell customization and configuration (including exported environment variables such as PATH) in ~/.zshrc or in files sourced from ~/.zshrc. If you are certain that you must export some environment variables in ~/.zshenv, do it where indicated by comments.

Zsh supports several additional startup files with complex rules governing when each file is sourced. The additional startup files are ~/.zprofile, ~/.zlogin and ~/.zlogout. Do not create these files unless you are absolutely certain you need them.

Updating

Run z4h update to update Zsh for Humans. There is no update mechanism for ~/.zshrc itself.

Uninstalling

  1. Delete or replace ~/.zshenv and ~/.zshrc. If you had these files prior to the installation of Zsh for Humans and have replied in the affirmative when asked by the installer whether you want them backed up, you can find them in ~/zsh-backup.
  2. Restart your terminal. Restarting zsh is not enough.
  3. Delete Zsh for Humans cache:
    rm -rf -- "${XDG_CACHE_HOME:-$HOME/.cache}/zsh4humans/v5"
    

Advanced configuration tips

See this document.