![]() ![]() I usually have a picture of my kids up if I’ve bothered to change the wallpaper. Since I wiped it and reinstalled it a few months ago, I haven’t changed it. I have an original 9.7” iPad Pro in white with 128GB of storage. Second, I do web development, including some of the recent changes on The Sweet Setup. That means using apps like Ulysses and Scrivener. First, I write content as a freelancer for myself and for clients. I’m Curtis McHale, and I’ve been self-employed for 10 years. New setup interviews are posted every Monday follow us on RSS or Twitter to stay up to date. ![]() We do these interviews because not only are they fun, but a glimpse into what tools someone uses and how they use those tools can spark our imagination and give us an idea or insight into how we can do things better. I'm including them anyway.Every week, we post a new interview with someone about what software they use on their Mac, iPhone, or iPad. Like, if you open Terminal.app on Mac some of these still work because it's the shell and not iTerm. Some of these are not directly related to iTerm and are just "shell features". FunctionĮnter Character Selection Mode in Copy ModeĬopy actions goes into the normal system clipboard which you can paste like normal. There's no need to Copy to the clipboard if you have General > Selection > Copy to pasteboard on selection enabled. I instead just mouse select (which copies to the clipboard) and paste. Moving by word on a line (this is a shell thing but passes through fine)Ĭursor Jump with Mouse (shell and vim - might depend on config)Ĭopy and Paste with iTerm without using the mouse (go to beginning of current line) but that doesn't work in the shell. For example ⌘ + Left Arrow is usually the same as Home Keys and Mac equivalents don't always work. It works in many contexts.Ī lot of shell shortcuts work in iterm and it's good to learn these because arrow keys, home/end Instead of typing exit, just get this in muscle memory. In general, use this instead of typing clear over and over. If you use ⌘ + K, this is telling iTerm to clear the screen which might have the same result or do something terrible (like when using a TUI like top or htop. This is telling the shell to do it instead of an explicit command like clear or cls in DOS. Especially when your last command was wrong by a single typo or something. Ctrl as modifier might also work on mac and non-mac keyboards/shells/apps. This takes you off the home row but it's easy to rememberįast way to jump by words to correct a typo or "run again" with minor changes to last command. Ctrl-R is faster if you know the string you are looking for. Use this with command history to repeat commands and changing one thing at the end!Ĭycle and browse your history with up and down. Use this to start over typing without hitting Ctrl-C Hopefully some of these improve your work life. There is also more than one way to do a thing so adopt what you like best. There are many shortcuts out there but I use these quite a bit. These will usually work in Bash/Zsh/Fish on Mac and on Linux. These are just common shell shortcuts unrelated to iTerm itelf. ![]() These might be helpful to getting you faster with the shell. ⌘+ Left Arrow (I usually move by tab number) ⌘ + Shift + Enter (use with fullscreen to temp fullscreen a pane!)Ĭtrl + ⌘ + Arrow (given you haven't mapped this to something else) ⌘ + Alt + Shift and then drag the pane from anywhere ⌘ + Shift + D (mnemonic: shift is a wide horizontal key) ⌘ + backtick (true of all mac apps and works with desktops/mission control) ![]()
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