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Rabu, 20 Februari 2013

Customized your terminal linux

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Piemon c0de ~ Customized your terminal linux 

My Friends , When we use Operating system based linux, we will often use Terminal, But by default the terminal linux is a little bit boring and unattractive,


with a little modifying ~/.bashrc file, we can change the display terminal become more attractive and beautifully, Picture on the side result after i modifying ~/.bashrc file,




Step by step :

  • Open your .bashrc file with geany, nano or gedit ,etc. .  here i use geany
sudo geany ~/.bashrc
  • Append the following line at the end.
PS1="\a\n\e[1;32m\u@\h ~> \e[0;34m on \d at \@\n\e[1;33m\w \e[0m\n\e[0;32m\$ "


Options of what put , all list here :
\a     an ASCII bell character (07)
\d     the date in "Weekday Month Date" format (e.g., "Tue May 26")
\D{format}
the format is passed to strftime(3) and the result is inserted into the  prompt string; an empty format results in a locale-specific time representation. The braces are required.
\e     an ASCII escape character (033)
\h     the hostname up to the first `.'
\H     the hostname
\j     the number of jobs currently managed by the shell
\l     the basename of the shell's terminal device name
\n     newline
\r     carriage return
\s     the name of the shell, the basename of $0 (the portion following the final slash)
\t     the current time in 24-hour HH:MM:SS format
\T     the current time in 12-hour HH:MM:SS format
\@     the current time in 12-hour am/pm format
\A     the current time in 24-hour HH:MM format
\u     the username of the current user
\v     the version of bash (e.g., 2.00)
\V     the release of bash, version + patch level (e.g., 2.00.0)
\w     the current working directory, with $HOME abbreviated with a tilde
\W     the basename of the current working directory, with $HOME abbreviated with a tilde
\!     the history number of this command
\#     the command number of this command
\$     if the effective UID is 0, a #, otherwise a $
\nnn   the character corresponding to the octal number nnn
\\     a backslash
\[     begin a sequence of non-printing characters, which could be used to embed a terminal control sequence into the prompt
\] End a sequence of non-printing characters
if you wish , you may also use colors :
Black       0;30     Dark Gray     1;30 Blue        0;34     Light Blue    1;34 Green       0;32     Light Green   1;32 Cyan        0;36     Light Cyan    1;36 Red         0;31     Light Red     1;31 Purple      0;35     Light Purple  1;35 Brown       0;33     Yellow        1;33 Light Gray  0;37     White         1;37

Note :
please backup .bashrc before you modifying file that

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