Skip to content

MBrassey/macOS

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Desktop Configuration

My macOS (High Sierra) desktop.

licensebadge

─── reddit

─── Google+

Table of Contents

Software

Xcode
iTerm2
Homebrew
zsh + oh-my-zsh
vim
Zephyros
Okeanos
gtop
tty-clock
cava (cli visualiser) + mosh (ssh)
appleseed

This script is generally a good preparation step: When I do a clean macOS installation.

WindowManager

I have a pseudo tiling window manager configured using Zephyros & Okeanos together. This is a video demonstration from stayradiated, the creator of Okeanos:

Okeanos

"okeanos (ωκεανός) is Greek for the ocean (kind of obvious maybe) and zephyros (Ζέφυρος) is Greek for the West wind" - u/saligari

Terminal

I've configured iTerm2 in a few ways to suit my liking. Simply import my iTerm2 profile json or set up a few things manually. I imported the Hybrid color preset. Under window settings, Transparency=19%, Style=No Title Bar and I'm using no Blurring. I'm using the powerline patched - Hack font | A typeface designed for source code. I prefer zsh, and have provided my custom theme trident.zsh-theme.

PROMPT="%{$fg_bold[blue]%}───╼%{$reset_color%} "
RPROMPT="%{$fg[cyan]%}ψ %M %{$fg[green]%}%~%{$reset_color%}"

appleseed

appleseed v1.0.0 is a command line widget (CLW), I designed for macOS and iTerm2. Its a flexible platform for process automation and added eye candy. It utilizes imgcat to view image files inside the terminal with the help of shell integration. • For best results, launch in a tall by thin proportioned shell.

Misc.

I recommend the Hybrid color theme for vim. In the macOS General settings, I use the Graphite Appearance, and the Dark Bar and Dock. The command line visualizer I am utilizing is cava. You can also use cli-visualizer. I run the sofware over a mosh (persistant ssh) session to a Linux VM or instance. As for tmux, this is my preferred config. View the Wallpaper.

Questions

Contact me at [email protected] with any questions or comments.

License

MacOS is published under the CC0_1.0_Universal license.

The Creative Commons CC0 Public Domain Dedication waives copyright interest in a work you've created and dedicates it to the world-wide public domain. Use CC0 to opt out of copyright entirely and ensure your work has the widest reach. As with the Unlicense and typical software licenses, CC0 disclaims warranties. CC0 is very similar to the Unlicense.