A smart Git prompt for your terminal powered by Node.js.
- Bash 3.2.x
- Fish 2.5.x
- Zsh 5.3
- Node.js (tested with 0.10.x, 5.7.x, 6.9.x, 10.x).
- Git (tested with 1.9.x, 2.7.x, 2.11.x, 2.14.x, 2.25.x).
Note: There is a good change Nodeprompt will work with other configurations — just give it a shot and let me know!
Since v2.0.0 Nodeprompt requires some special (powerline) symbols to be supported by the terminal font to render properly.
Some fonts support those symbols (glyphs) out–of–the–box, for instance, Fira Code used in examples below. Many open–source fonts have been patched and can be downloaded from GitHub. If neither works for you, you can google "[your font name] powerline" because it's likely someone patched your favorite font and posted it on–line.
A note for iTerm 2 users: Make sure the powerline–compatible font is enabled in both Profiles > Text > Font
and Profiles > Text > Non–ASCII Font
.
-
Call
npm install -g nodeprompt
(oryarn global add nodeprompt
). -
Configure your shell:
Put the following line:
. nodeprompt-enable-bash
in your
~/.bashrc
or~/.bash_profile
file. Re–open the terminal window or source the file, e.g.source ~/.bashrc
.Put the following lines:
. nodeprompt-enable-zsh
in your
~/.zshrc
file. Re–open the terminal window orsource ~/.zshrc
.Create a symbolic link to the
fish_prompt.fish
function file:ln -s /path/to/../nodeprompt/bin/fish_prompt.fish ~/.config/fish/functions/fish_prompt.fish
Re–open the terminal window.
-
Enjoy your beautiful prompt!
Nodeprompt is configurable and things like the length of the SHA-1 hash or the number of levels displayed in the path can be adjusted. It is also possible to create a new prompt template from scratch, if that's what you want to do tonight.
Note: You don't have to configure Nodeprompt. By default, it uses config.default.js
.
The config file is a plain Node.js module. To configure your prompt, create a ~/.nodeprompt/config.user.js
file with module.exports
:
module.exports = {
option: 'value'
};
or simply copy the default configuration and modify it. Refer to the documentation to learn more.
Nodeprompt can be used as a utility to obtain the status of the Git repository. Use the model
property to build your own prompt or logger on top of the library:
const Nodeprompt = require( './lib/nodeprompt.js' );
const prompt = new Nodeprompt();
console.log( prompt.model );
> {
pwd: '/Users/oleq/nodeprompt',
home: '/Users/oleq',
gitDir: '.git',
isGit: true,
hostname: 'MBP',
username: 'oleq',
path: [ '~', 'nodeprompt' ],
namerev: 'v1.0',
head: 'ref: refs/heads/v1.0',
hash: 'b22bb89',
mergeHead: '',
isInit: false,
isBisecting: false,
isDetached: false,
isMerging: false,
modified: 2,
added: 0,
untracked: 0,
ahead: 2,
behind: 0,
branch: 'v1.0',
hasDiverged: false
}
Create an issue here.
Clone the repository to /path/to/nodeprompt
and put . /path/to/nodeprompt/bin/nodeprompt-bash
in your ~/.bashrc
or ~/.bash_profile
file. Source it or restart the terminal.
MIT/X11. See the LICENSE file to know more.
Kudos to Leonid Volnitsky for git-prompt, an inspiration to create this project.
- Call
npm run test
to run tests. - Call
npm run coverage
to run tests with code coverage report in./coverage
. - Call
npm run lint
to run ESLint.