diff --git a/_desktop/install-desktop.sh b/_desktop/install-desktop.sh index 6262d5a..cc8ebdf 100644 --- a/_desktop/install-desktop.sh +++ b/_desktop/install-desktop.sh @@ -4,7 +4,7 @@ mkdir -p ~/.config ~/.local/bin ~/.local/settings # link config -for i in dunst zathura; do +for i in dunst kitty zathura; do rm -rf ~/.config/${i} ln -sf ~/.local/repos/dotfiles/_desktop/${i} ~/.config done diff --git a/_desktop/kitty/default.conf b/_desktop/kitty/default.conf deleted file mode 100644 index ec41a07..0000000 --- a/_desktop/kitty/default.conf +++ /dev/null @@ -1,1347 +0,0 @@ -# vim:fileencoding=utf-8:ft=conf:foldmethod=marker - -#: Fonts {{{ - -#: kitty has very powerful font management. You can configure -#: individual font faces and even specify special fonts for particular -#: characters. - -# font_family monospace -# bold_font auto -# italic_font auto -# bold_italic_font auto - -#: You can specify different fonts for the bold/italic/bold-italic -#: variants. To get a full list of supported fonts use the `kitty -#: list-fonts` command. By default they are derived automatically, by -#: the OSes font system. Setting them manually is useful for font -#: families that have many weight variants like Book, Medium, Thick, -#: etc. For example:: - -#: font_family Operator Mono Book -#: bold_font Operator Mono Medium -#: italic_font Operator Mono Book Italic -#: bold_italic_font Operator Mono Medium Italic - -# font_size 11.0 - -#: Font size (in pts) - -# force_ltr no - -#: kitty does not support BIDI (bidirectional text), however, for RTL -#: scripts, words are automatically displayed in RTL. That is to say, -#: in an RTL script, the words "HELLO WORLD" display in kitty as -#: "WORLD HELLO", and if you try to select a substring of an RTL- -#: shaped string, you will get the character that would be there had -#: the the string been LTR. For example, assuming the Hebrew word -#: ירושלים, selecting the character that on the screen appears to be ם -#: actually writes into the selection buffer the character י. - -#: kitty's default behavior is useful in conjunction with a filter to -#: reverse the word order, however, if you wish to manipulate RTL -#: glyphs, it can be very challenging to work with, so this option is -#: provided to turn it off. Furthermore, this option can be used with -#: the command line program GNU FriBidi -#: to get BIDI -#: support, because it will force kitty to always treat the text as -#: LTR, which FriBidi expects for terminals. - -# adjust_line_height 0 -# adjust_column_width 0 - -#: Change the size of each character cell kitty renders. You can use -#: either numbers, which are interpreted as pixels or percentages -#: (number followed by %), which are interpreted as percentages of the -#: unmodified values. You can use negative pixels or percentages less -#: than 100% to reduce sizes (but this might cause rendering -#: artifacts). - -# symbol_map U+E0A0-U+E0A3,U+E0C0-U+E0C7 PowerlineSymbols - -#: Map the specified unicode codepoints to a particular font. Useful -#: if you need special rendering for some symbols, such as for -#: Powerline. Avoids the need for patched fonts. Each unicode code -#: point is specified in the form U+. You -#: can specify multiple code points, separated by commas and ranges -#: separated by hyphens. symbol_map itself can be specified multiple -#: times. Syntax is:: - -#: symbol_map codepoints Font Family Name - -# disable_ligatures never - -#: Choose how you want to handle multi-character ligatures. The -#: default is to always render them. You can tell kitty to not render -#: them when the cursor is over them by using cursor to make editing -#: easier, or have kitty never render them at all by using always, if -#: you don't like them. The ligature strategy can be set per-window -#: either using the kitty remote control facility or by defining -#: shortcuts for it in kitty.conf, for example:: - -#: map alt+1 disable_ligatures_in active always -#: map alt+2 disable_ligatures_in all never -#: map alt+3 disable_ligatures_in tab cursor - -#: Note that this refers to programming ligatures, typically -#: implemented using the calt OpenType feature. For disabling general -#: ligatures, use the font_features setting. - -# font_features none - -#: Choose exactly which OpenType features to enable or disable. This -#: is useful as some fonts might have features worthwhile in a -#: terminal. For example, Fira Code Retina includes a discretionary -#: feature, zero, which in that font changes the appearance of the -#: zero (0), to make it more easily distinguishable from Ø. Fira Code -#: Retina also includes other discretionary features known as -#: Stylistic Sets which have the tags ss01 through ss20. - -#: Note that this code is indexed by PostScript name, and not the font -#: family. This allows you to define very precise feature settings; -#: e.g. you can disable a feature in the italic font but not in the -#: regular font. - -#: On Linux, these are read from the FontConfig database first and -#: then this, setting is applied, so they can be configured in a -#: single, central place. - -#: To get the PostScript name for a font, use kitty + list-fonts -#: --psnames: - -#: .. code-block:: sh - -#: $ kitty + list-fonts --psnames | grep Fira -#: Fira Code -#: Fira Code Bold (FiraCode-Bold) -#: Fira Code Light (FiraCode-Light) -#: Fira Code Medium (FiraCode-Medium) -#: Fira Code Regular (FiraCode-Regular) -#: Fira Code Retina (FiraCode-Retina) - -#: The part in brackets is the PostScript name. - -#: Enable alternate zero and oldstyle numerals:: - -#: font_features FiraCode-Retina +zero +onum - -#: Enable only alternate zero:: - -#: font_features FiraCode-Retina +zero - -#: Disable the normal ligatures, but keep the calt feature which (in -#: this font) breaks up monotony:: - -#: font_features TT2020StyleB-Regular -liga +calt - -#: In conjunction with force_ltr, you may want to disable Arabic -#: shaping entirely, and only look at their isolated forms if they -#: show up in a document. You can do this with e.g.:: - -#: font_features UnifontMedium +isol -medi -fina -init - -# box_drawing_scale 0.001, 1, 1.5, 2 - -#: Change the sizes of the lines used for the box drawing unicode -#: characters These values are in pts. They will be scaled by the -#: monitor DPI to arrive at a pixel value. There must be four values -#: corresponding to thin, normal, thick, and very thick lines. - -#: }}} - -#: Cursor customization {{{ - -# cursor #cccccc - -#: Default cursor color - -# cursor_text_color #111111 - -#: Choose the color of text under the cursor. If you want it rendered -#: with the background color of the cell underneath instead, use the -#: special keyword: background - -# cursor_shape block - -#: The cursor shape can be one of (block, beam, underline) - -# cursor_beam_thickness 1.5 - -#: Defines the thickness of the beam cursor (in pts) - -# cursor_underline_thickness 2.0 - -#: Defines the thickness of the underline cursor (in pts) - -# cursor_blink_interval -1 - -#: The interval (in seconds) at which to blink the cursor. Set to zero -#: to disable blinking. Negative values mean use system default. Note -#: that numbers smaller than repaint_delay will be limited to -#: repaint_delay. - -# cursor_stop_blinking_after 15.0 - -#: Stop blinking cursor after the specified number of seconds of -#: keyboard inactivity. Set to zero to never stop blinking. - -#: }}} - -#: Scrollback {{{ - -# scrollback_lines 2000 - -#: Number of lines of history to keep in memory for scrolling back. -#: Memory is allocated on demand. Negative numbers are (effectively) -#: infinite scrollback. Note that using very large scrollback is not -#: recommended as it can slow down performance of the terminal and -#: also use large amounts of RAM. Instead, consider using -#: scrollback_pager_history_size. - -# scrollback_pager less --chop-long-lines --RAW-CONTROL-CHARS +INPUT_LINE_NUMBER - -#: Program with which to view scrollback in a new window. The -#: scrollback buffer is passed as STDIN to this program. If you change -#: it, make sure the program you use can handle ANSI escape sequences -#: for colors and text formatting. INPUT_LINE_NUMBER in the command -#: line above will be replaced by an integer representing which line -#: should be at the top of the screen. Similarly CURSOR_LINE and -#: CURSOR_COLUMN will be replaced by the current cursor position. - -# scrollback_pager_history_size 0 - -#: Separate scrollback history size, used only for browsing the -#: scrollback buffer (in MB). This separate buffer is not available -#: for interactive scrolling but will be piped to the pager program -#: when viewing scrollback buffer in a separate window. The current -#: implementation stores the data in UTF-8, so approximatively 10000 -#: lines per megabyte at 100 chars per line, for pure ASCII text, -#: unformatted text. A value of zero or less disables this feature. -#: The maximum allowed size is 4GB. - -# wheel_scroll_multiplier 5.0 - -#: Modify the amount scrolled by the mouse wheel. Note this is only -#: used for low precision scrolling devices, not for high precision -#: scrolling on platforms such as macOS and Wayland. Use negative -#: numbers to change scroll direction. - -# touch_scroll_multiplier 1.0 - -#: Modify the amount scrolled by a touchpad. Note this is only used -#: for high precision scrolling devices on platforms such as macOS and -#: Wayland. Use negative numbers to change scroll direction. - -#: }}} - -#: Mouse {{{ - -# mouse_hide_wait 0.0 - -#: Hide mouse cursor after the specified number of seconds of the -#: mouse not being used. Set to zero to disable mouse cursor hiding. -#: Set to a negative value to hide the mouse cursor immediately when -#: typing text. Disabled by default on macOS as getting it to work -#: robustly with the ever-changing sea of bugs that is Cocoa is too -#: much effort. - -# url_color #0087bd -# url_style curly - -#: The color and style for highlighting URLs on mouse-over. url_style -#: can be one of: none, single, double, curly - -# open_url_modifiers kitty_mod - -#: The modifier keys to press when clicking with the mouse on URLs to -#: open the URL - -# open_url_with default - -#: The program with which to open URLs that are clicked on. The -#: special value default means to use the operating system's default -#: URL handler. - -# url_prefixes http https file ftp - -#: The set of URL prefixes to look for when detecting a URL under the -#: mouse cursor. - -# detect_urls yes - -#: Detect URLs under the mouse. Detected URLs are highlighted with an -#: underline and the mouse cursor becomes a hand over them. Even if -#: this option is disabled, URLs are still clickable. - -# copy_on_select no - -#: Copy to clipboard or a private buffer on select. With this set to -#: clipboard, simply selecting text with the mouse will cause the text -#: to be copied to clipboard. Useful on platforms such as macOS that -#: do not have the concept of primary selections. You can instead -#: specify a name such as a1 to copy to a private kitty buffer -#: instead. Map a shortcut with the paste_from_buffer action to paste -#: from this private buffer. For example:: - -#: map cmd+shift+v paste_from_buffer a1 - -#: Note that copying to the clipboard is a security risk, as all -#: programs, including websites open in your browser can read the -#: contents of the system clipboard. - -# strip_trailing_spaces never - -#: Remove spaces at the end of lines when copying to clipboard. A -#: value of smart will do it when using normal selections, but not -#: rectangle selections. always will always do it. - -# rectangle_select_modifiers ctrl+alt - -#: The modifiers to use rectangular selection (i.e. to select text in -#: a rectangular block with the mouse) - -# terminal_select_modifiers shift - -#: The modifiers to override mouse selection even when a terminal -#: application has grabbed the mouse - -# select_by_word_characters @-./_~?&=%+# - -#: Characters considered part of a word when double clicking. In -#: addition to these characters any character that is marked as an -#: alphanumeric character in the unicode database will be matched. - -# click_interval -1.0 - -#: The interval between successive clicks to detect double/triple -#: clicks (in seconds). Negative numbers will use the system default -#: instead, if available, or fallback to 0.5. - -# focus_follows_mouse no - -#: Set the active window to the window under the mouse when moving the -#: mouse around - -# pointer_shape_when_grabbed arrow - -#: The shape of the mouse pointer when the program running in the -#: terminal grabs the mouse. Valid values are: arrow, beam and hand - -# default_pointer_shape beam - -#: The default shape of the mouse pointer. Valid values are: arrow, -#: beam and hand - -# pointer_shape_when_dragging beam - -#: The default shape of the mouse pointer when dragging across text. -#: Valid values are: arrow, beam and hand - -#: }}} - -#: Performance tuning {{{ - -# repaint_delay 10 - -#: Delay (in milliseconds) between screen updates. Decreasing it, -#: increases frames-per-second (FPS) at the cost of more CPU usage. -#: The default value yields ~100 FPS which is more than sufficient for -#: most uses. Note that to actually achieve 100 FPS you have to either -#: set sync_to_monitor to no or use a monitor with a high refresh -#: rate. Also, to minimize latency when there is pending input to be -#: processed, repaint_delay is ignored. - -# input_delay 3 - -#: Delay (in milliseconds) before input from the program running in -#: the terminal is processed. Note that decreasing it will increase -#: responsiveness, but also increase CPU usage and might cause flicker -#: in full screen programs that redraw the entire screen on each loop, -#: because kitty is so fast that partial screen updates will be drawn. - -# sync_to_monitor yes - -#: Sync screen updates to the refresh rate of the monitor. This -#: prevents tearing (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screen_tearing) -#: when scrolling. However, it limits the rendering speed to the -#: refresh rate of your monitor. With a very high speed mouse/high -#: keyboard repeat rate, you may notice some slight input latency. If -#: so, set this to no. - -#: }}} - -#: Terminal bell {{{ - -# enable_audio_bell yes - -#: Enable/disable the audio bell. Useful in environments that require -#: silence. - -# visual_bell_duration 0.0 - -#: Visual bell duration. Flash the screen when a bell occurs for the -#: specified number of seconds. Set to zero to disable. - -# window_alert_on_bell yes - -#: Request window attention on bell. Makes the dock icon bounce on -#: macOS or the taskbar flash on linux. - -# bell_on_tab yes - -#: Show a bell symbol on the tab if a bell occurs in one of the -#: windows in the tab and the window is not the currently focused -#: window - -# command_on_bell none - -#: Program to run when a bell occurs. - -#: }}} - -#: Window layout {{{ - -# remember_window_size yes -# initial_window_width 640 -# initial_window_height 400 - -#: If enabled, the window size will be remembered so that new -#: instances of kitty will have the same size as the previous -#: instance. If disabled, the window will initially have size -#: configured by initial_window_width/height, in pixels. You can use a -#: suffix of "c" on the width/height values to have them interpreted -#: as number of cells instead of pixels. - -# enabled_layouts * - -#: The enabled window layouts. A comma separated list of layout names. -#: The special value all means all layouts. The first listed layout -#: will be used as the startup layout. Default configuration is all -#: layouts in alphabetical order. For a list of available layouts, see -#: the https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/index.html#layouts. - -# window_resize_step_cells 2 -# window_resize_step_lines 2 - -#: The step size (in units of cell width/cell height) to use when -#: resizing windows. The cells value is used for horizontal resizing -#: and the lines value for vertical resizing. - -# window_border_width 0.5pt - -#: The width of window borders. Can be either in pixels (px) or pts -#: (pt). Values in pts will be rounded to the nearest number of pixels -#: based on screen resolution. If not specified the unit is assumed to -#: be pts. Note that borders are displayed only when more than one -#: window is visible. They are meant to separate multiple windows. - -# draw_minimal_borders yes - -#: Draw only the minimum borders needed. This means that only the -#: minimum needed borders for inactive windows are drawn. That is only -#: the borders that separate the inactive window from a neighbor. Note -#: that setting a non-zero window margin overrides this and causes all -#: borders to be drawn. - -# window_margin_width 0 - -#: The window margin (in pts) (blank area outside the border). A -#: single value sets all four sides. Two values set the vertical and -#: horizontal sides. Three values set top, horizontal and bottom. Four -#: values set top, right, bottom and left. - -# single_window_margin_width -1 - -#: The window margin (in pts) to use when only a single window is -#: visible. Negative values will cause the value of -#: window_margin_width to be used instead. A single value sets all -#: four sides. Two values set the vertical and horizontal sides. Three -#: values set top, horizontal and bottom. Four values set top, right, -#: bottom and left. - -# window_padding_width 0 - -#: The window padding (in pts) (blank area between the text and the -#: window border). A single value sets all four sides. Two values set -#: the vertical and horizontal sides. Three values set top, horizontal -#: and bottom. Four values set top, right, bottom and left. - -# placement_strategy center - -#: When the window size is not an exact multiple of the cell size, the -#: cell area of the terminal window will have some extra padding on -#: the sides. You can control how that padding is distributed with -#: this option. Using a value of center means the cell area will be -#: placed centrally. A value of top-left means the padding will be on -#: only the bottom and right edges. - -# active_border_color #00ff00 - -#: The color for the border of the active window. Set this to none to -#: not draw borders around the active window. - -# inactive_border_color #cccccc - -#: The color for the border of inactive windows - -# bell_border_color #ff5a00 - -#: The color for the border of inactive windows in which a bell has -#: occurred - -# inactive_text_alpha 1.0 - -#: Fade the text in inactive windows by the specified amount (a number -#: between zero and one, with zero being fully faded). - -# hide_window_decorations no - -#: Hide the window decorations (title-bar and window borders) with -#: yes. On macOS, titlebar-only can be used to only hide the titlebar. -#: Whether this works and exactly what effect it has depends on the -#: window manager/operating system. - -# resize_debounce_time 0.1 - -#: The time (in seconds) to wait before redrawing the screen when a -#: resize event is received. On platforms such as macOS, where the -#: operating system sends events corresponding to the start and end of -#: a resize, this number is ignored. - -# resize_draw_strategy static - -#: Choose how kitty draws a window while a resize is in progress. A -#: value of static means draw the current window contents, mostly -#: unchanged. A value of scale means draw the current window contents -#: scaled. A value of blank means draw a blank window. A value of size -#: means show the window size in cells. - -# resize_in_steps no - -#: Resize the OS window in steps as large as the cells, instead of -#: with the usual pixel accuracy. Combined with an -#: initial_window_width and initial_window_height in number of cells, -#: this option can be used to keep the margins as small as possible -#: when resizing the OS window. Note that this does not currently work -#: on Wayland. - -# confirm_os_window_close 0 - -#: Ask for confirmation when closing an OS window or a tab that has at -#: least this number of kitty windows in it. A value of zero disables -#: confirmation. This confirmation also applies to requests to quit -#: the entire application (all OS windows, via the quit action). - -#: }}} - -#: Tab bar {{{ - -# tab_bar_edge bottom - -#: Which edge to show the tab bar on, top or bottom - -# tab_bar_margin_width 0.0 - -#: The margin to the left and right of the tab bar (in pts) - -# tab_bar_style fade - -#: The tab bar style, can be one of: fade, separator, powerline, or -#: hidden. In the fade style, each tab's edges fade into the -#: background color, in the separator style, tabs are separated by a -#: configurable separator, and the powerline shows the tabs as a -#: continuous line. If you use the hidden style, you might want to -#: create a mapping for the select_tab action which presents you with -#: a list of tabs and allows for easy switching to a tab. - -# tab_bar_min_tabs 2 - -#: The minimum number of tabs that must exist before the tab bar is -#: shown - -# tab_switch_strategy previous - -#: The algorithm to use when switching to a tab when the current tab -#: is closed. The default of previous will switch to the last used -#: tab. A value of left will switch to the tab to the left of the -#: closed tab. A value of right will switch to the tab to the right of -#: the closed tab. A value of last will switch to the right-most tab. - -# tab_fade 0.25 0.5 0.75 1 - -#: Control how each tab fades into the background when using fade for -#: the tab_bar_style. Each number is an alpha (between zero and one) -#: that controls how much the corresponding cell fades into the -#: background, with zero being no fade and one being full fade. You -#: can change the number of cells used by adding/removing entries to -#: this list. - -# tab_separator " ┇" - -#: The separator between tabs in the tab bar when using separator as -#: the tab_bar_style. - -# tab_activity_symbol none - -#: Some text or a unicode symbol to show on the tab if a window in the -#: tab that does not have focus has some activity. - -# tab_title_template "{title}" - -#: A template to render the tab title. The default just renders the -#: title. If you wish to include the tab-index as well, use something -#: like: {index}: {title}. Useful if you have shortcuts mapped for -#: goto_tab N. In addition you can use {layout_name} for the current -#: layout name and {num_windows} for the number of windows in the tab. -#: Note that formatting is done by Python's string formatting -#: machinery, so you can use, for instance, {layout_name[:2].upper()} -#: to show only the first two letters of the layout name, upper-cased. -#: If you want to style the text, you can use styling directives, for -#: example: {fmt.fg.red}red{fmt.fg.default}normal{fmt.bg._00FF00}green -#: bg{fmt.bg.normal}. Similarly, for bold and italic: -#: {fmt.bold}bold{fmt.nobold}normal{fmt.italic}italic{fmt.noitalic}. - -# active_tab_title_template none - -#: Template to use for active tabs, if not specified falls back to -#: tab_title_template. - -# active_tab_foreground #000 -# active_tab_background #eee -# active_tab_font_style bold-italic -# inactive_tab_foreground #444 -# inactive_tab_background #999 -# inactive_tab_font_style normal - -#: Tab bar colors and styles - -# tab_bar_background none - -#: Background color for the tab bar. Defaults to using the terminal -#: background color. - -#: }}} - -#: Color scheme {{{ - -# foreground #dddddd -# background #000000 - -#: The foreground and background colors - -# background_opacity 1.0 - -#: The opacity of the background. A number between 0 and 1, where 1 is -#: opaque and 0 is fully transparent. This will only work if -#: supported by the OS (for instance, when using a compositor under -#: X11). Note that it only sets the background color's opacity in -#: cells that have the same background color as the default terminal -#: background. This is so that things like the status bar in vim, -#: powerline prompts, etc. still look good. But it means that if you -#: use a color theme with a background color in your editor, it will -#: not be rendered as transparent. Instead you should change the -#: default background color in your kitty config and not use a -#: background color in the editor color scheme. Or use the escape -#: codes to set the terminals default colors in a shell script to -#: launch your editor. Be aware that using a value less than 1.0 is a -#: (possibly significant) performance hit. If you want to dynamically -#: change transparency of windows set dynamic_background_opacity to -#: yes (this is off by default as it has a performance cost) - -# background_image none - -#: Path to a background image. Must be in PNG format. - -# background_image_layout tiled - -#: Whether to tile or scale the background image. - -# background_image_linear no - -#: When background image is scaled, whether linear interpolation -#: should be used. - -# dynamic_background_opacity no - -#: Allow changing of the background_opacity dynamically, using either -#: keyboard shortcuts (increase_background_opacity and -#: decrease_background_opacity) or the remote control facility. - -# background_tint 0.0 - -#: How much to tint the background image by the background color. The -#: tint is applied only under the text area, not margin/borders. Makes -#: it easier to read the text. Tinting is done using the current -#: background color for each window. This setting applies only if -#: background_opacity is set and transparent windows are supported or -#: background_image is set. - -# dim_opacity 0.75 - -#: How much to dim text that has the DIM/FAINT attribute set. One -#: means no dimming and zero means fully dimmed (i.e. invisible). - -# selection_foreground #000000 - -#: The foreground for text selected with the mouse. A value of none -#: means to leave the color unchanged. - -# selection_background #fffacd - -#: The background for text selected with the mouse. - - -#: The 16 terminal colors. There are 8 basic colors, each color has a -#: dull and bright version. You can also set the remaining colors from -#: the 256 color table as color16 to color255. - -# color0 #000000 -# color8 #767676 - -#: black - -# color1 #cc0403 -# color9 #f2201f - -#: red - -# color2 #19cb00 -# color10 #23fd00 - -#: green - -# color3 #cecb00 -# color11 #fffd00 - -#: yellow - -# color4 #0d73cc -# color12 #1a8fff - -#: blue - -# color5 #cb1ed1 -# color13 #fd28ff - -#: magenta - -# color6 #0dcdcd -# color14 #14ffff - -#: cyan - -# color7 #dddddd -# color15 #ffffff - -#: white - -# mark1_foreground black - -#: Color for marks of type 1 - -# mark1_background #98d3cb - -#: Color for marks of type 1 (light steel blue) - -# mark2_foreground black - -#: Color for marks of type 2 - -# mark2_background #f2dcd3 - -#: Color for marks of type 1 (beige) - -# mark3_foreground black - -#: Color for marks of type 3 - -# mark3_background #f274bc - -#: Color for marks of type 1 (violet) - -#: }}} - -#: Advanced {{{ - -# shell . - -#: The shell program to execute. The default value of . means to use -#: whatever shell is set as the default shell for the current user. -#: Note that on macOS if you change this, you might need to add -#: --login to ensure that the shell starts in interactive mode and -#: reads its startup rc files. - -# editor . - -#: The console editor to use when editing the kitty config file or -#: similar tasks. A value of . means to use the environment variables -#: VISUAL and EDITOR in that order. Note that this environment -#: variable has to be set not just in your shell startup scripts but -#: system-wide, otherwise kitty will not see it. - -# close_on_child_death no - -#: Close the window when the child process (shell) exits. If no (the -#: default), the terminal will remain open when the child exits as -#: long as there are still processes outputting to the terminal (for -#: example disowned or backgrounded processes). If yes, the window -#: will close as soon as the child process exits. Note that setting it -#: to yes means that any background processes still using the terminal -#: can fail silently because their stdout/stderr/stdin no longer work. - -# allow_remote_control no - -#: Allow other programs to control kitty. If you turn this on other -#: programs can control all aspects of kitty, including sending text -#: to kitty windows, opening new windows, closing windows, reading the -#: content of windows, etc. Note that this even works over ssh -#: connections. You can chose to either allow any program running -#: within kitty to control it, with yes or only programs that connect -#: to the socket specified with the kitty --listen-on command line -#: option, if you use the value socket-only. The latter is useful if -#: you want to prevent programs running on a remote computer over ssh -#: from controlling kitty. - -# listen_on none - -#: Tell kitty to listen to the specified unix/tcp socket for remote -#: control connections. Note that this will apply to all kitty -#: instances. It can be overridden by the kitty --listen-on command -#: line flag. This option accepts only UNIX sockets, such as -#: unix:${TEMP}/mykitty or (on Linux) unix:@mykitty. Environment -#: variables are expanded. If {kitty_pid} is present then it is -#: replaced by the PID of the kitty process, otherwise the PID of the -#: kitty process is appended to the value, with a hyphen. This option -#: is ignored unless you also set allow_remote_control to enable -#: remote control. See the help for kitty --listen-on for more -#: details. - -# env - -#: Specify environment variables to set in all child processes. Note -#: that environment variables are expanded recursively, so if you -#: use:: - -#: env MYVAR1=a -#: env MYVAR2=${MYVAR1}/${HOME}/b - -#: The value of MYVAR2 will be a//b. - -# update_check_interval 24 - -#: Periodically check if an update to kitty is available. If an update -#: is found a system notification is displayed informing you of the -#: available update. The default is to check every 24 hrs, set to zero -#: to disable. - -# startup_session none - -#: Path to a session file to use for all kitty instances. Can be -#: overridden by using the kitty --session command line option for -#: individual instances. See -#: https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/index.html#sessions in the kitty -#: documentation for details. Note that relative paths are interpreted -#: with respect to the kitty config directory. Environment variables -#: in the path are expanded. - -# clipboard_control write-clipboard write-primary - -#: Allow programs running in kitty to read and write from the -#: clipboard. You can control exactly which actions are allowed. The -#: set of possible actions is: write-clipboard read-clipboard write- -#: primary read-primary. You can additionally specify no-append to -#: disable kitty's protocol extension for clipboard concatenation. The -#: default is to allow writing to the clipboard and primary selection -#: with concatenation enabled. Note that enabling the read -#: functionality is a security risk as it means that any program, even -#: one running on a remote server via SSH can read your clipboard. - -# allow_hyperlinks yes - -#: Process hyperlink (OSC 8) escape sequences. If disabled OSC 8 -#: escape sequences are ignored. Otherwise they become clickable -#: links, that you can click by holding down ctrl+shift and clicking -#: with the mouse. The special value of ``ask`` means that kitty will -#: ask before opening the link. - -# term xterm-kitty - -#: The value of the TERM environment variable to set. Changing this -#: can break many terminal programs, only change it if you know what -#: you are doing, not because you read some advice on Stack Overflow -#: to change it. The TERM variable is used by various programs to get -#: information about the capabilities and behavior of the terminal. If -#: you change it, depending on what programs you run, and how -#: different the terminal you are changing it to is, various things -#: from key-presses, to colors, to various advanced features may not -#: work. - -#: }}} - -#: OS specific tweaks {{{ - -# macos_titlebar_color system - -#: Change the color of the kitty window's titlebar on macOS. A value -#: of system means to use the default system color, a value of -#: background means to use the background color of the currently -#: active window and finally you can use an arbitrary color, such as -#: #12af59 or red. WARNING: This option works by using a hack, as -#: there is no proper Cocoa API for it. It sets the background color -#: of the entire window and makes the titlebar transparent. As such it -#: is incompatible with background_opacity. If you want to use both, -#: you are probably better off just hiding the titlebar with -#: hide_window_decorations. - -# macos_option_as_alt no - -#: Use the option key as an alt key. With this set to no, kitty will -#: use the macOS native Option+Key = unicode character behavior. This -#: will break any Alt+key keyboard shortcuts in your terminal -#: programs, but you can use the macOS unicode input technique. You -#: can use the values: left, right, or both to use only the left, -#: right or both Option keys as Alt, instead. - -# macos_hide_from_tasks no - -#: Hide the kitty window from running tasks (Option+Tab) on macOS. - -# macos_quit_when_last_window_closed no - -#: Have kitty quit when all the top-level windows are closed. By -#: default, kitty will stay running, even with no open windows, as is -#: the expected behavior on macOS. - -# macos_window_resizable yes - -#: Disable this if you want kitty top-level (OS) windows to not be -#: resizable on macOS. - -# macos_thicken_font 0 - -#: Draw an extra border around the font with the given width, to -#: increase legibility at small font sizes. For example, a value of -#: 0.75 will result in rendering that looks similar to sub-pixel -#: antialiasing at common font sizes. - -# macos_traditional_fullscreen no - -#: Use the traditional full-screen transition, that is faster, but -#: less pretty. - -# macos_show_window_title_in all - -#: Show or hide the window title in the macOS window or menu-bar. A -#: value of window will show the title of the currently active window -#: at the top of the macOS window. A value of menubar will show the -#: title of the currently active window in the macOS menu-bar, making -#: use of otherwise wasted space. all will show the title everywhere -#: and none hides the title in the window and the menu-bar. - -# macos_custom_beam_cursor no - -#: Enable/disable custom mouse cursor for macOS that is easier to see -#: on both light and dark backgrounds. WARNING: this might make your -#: mouse cursor invisible on dual GPU machines. - -# linux_display_server auto - -#: Choose between Wayland and X11 backends. By default, an appropriate -#: backend based on the system state is chosen automatically. Set it -#: to x11 or wayland to force the choice. - -#: }}} - -#: Keyboard shortcuts {{{ - -#: For a list of key names, see: the GLFW key macros -#: . -#: The name to use is the part after the GLFW_KEY_ prefix. For a list -#: of modifier names, see: GLFW mods -#: - -#: On Linux you can also use XKB key names to bind keys that are not -#: supported by GLFW. See XKB keys -#: for a list of key names. The name to use is the part -#: after the XKB_KEY_ prefix. Note that you can only use an XKB key -#: name for keys that are not known as GLFW keys. - -#: Finally, you can use raw system key codes to map keys, again only -#: for keys that are not known as GLFW keys. To see the system key -#: code for a key, start kitty with the kitty --debug-keyboard option. -#: Then kitty will output some debug text for every key event. In that -#: text look for ``native_code`` the value of that becomes the key -#: name in the shortcut. For example: - -#: .. code-block:: none - -#: on_key_input: glfw key: 65 native_code: 0x61 action: PRESS mods: 0x0 text: 'a' - -#: Here, the key name for the A key is 0x61 and you can use it with:: - -#: map ctrl+0x61 something - -#: to map ctrl+a to something. - -#: You can use the special action no_op to unmap a keyboard shortcut -#: that is assigned in the default configuration:: - -#: map kitty_mod+space no_op - -#: You can combine multiple actions to be triggered by a single -#: shortcut, using the syntax below:: - -#: map key combine action1 action2 action3 ... - -#: For example:: - -#: map kitty_mod+e combine : new_window : next_layout - -#: this will create a new window and switch to the next available -#: layout - -#: You can use multi-key shortcuts using the syntax shown below:: - -#: map key1>key2>key3 action - -#: For example:: - -#: map ctrl+f>2 set_font_size 20 - -# kitty_mod ctrl+shift - -#: The value of kitty_mod is used as the modifier for all default -#: shortcuts, you can change it in your kitty.conf to change the -#: modifiers for all the default shortcuts. - -# clear_all_shortcuts no - -#: You can have kitty remove all shortcut definition seen up to this -#: point. Useful, for instance, to remove the default shortcuts. - -# kitten_alias hints hints --hints-offset=0 - -#: You can create aliases for kitten names, this allows overriding the -#: defaults for kitten options and can also be used to shorten -#: repeated mappings of the same kitten with a specific group of -#: options. For example, the above alias changes the default value of -#: kitty +kitten hints --hints-offset to zero for all mappings, -#: including the builtin ones. - -#: Clipboard {{{ - -# map kitty_mod+c copy_to_clipboard - -#: There is also a copy_or_interrupt action that can be optionally -#: mapped to Ctrl+c. It will copy only if there is a selection and -#: send an interrupt otherwise. Similarly, copy_and_clear_or_interrupt -#: will copy and clear the selection or send an interrupt if there is -#: no selection. - -# map cmd+c copy_to_clipboard -# map kitty_mod+v paste_from_clipboard -# map cmd+v paste_from_clipboard -# map kitty_mod+s paste_from_selection -# map shift+insert paste_from_selection -# map kitty_mod+o pass_selection_to_program - -#: You can also pass the contents of the current selection to any -#: program using pass_selection_to_program. By default, the system's -#: open program is used, but you can specify your own, the selection -#: will be passed as a command line argument to the program, for -#: example:: - -#: map kitty_mod+o pass_selection_to_program firefox - -#: You can pass the current selection to a terminal program running in -#: a new kitty window, by using the @selection placeholder:: - -#: map kitty_mod+y new_window less @selection - -#: }}} - -#: Scrolling {{{ - -# map kitty_mod+up scroll_line_up -# map alt+cmd+page_up scroll_line_up -# map cmd+up scroll_line_up -# map kitty_mod+k scroll_line_up -# map kitty_mod+down scroll_line_down -# map kitty_mod+j scroll_line_down -# map alt+cmd+page_down scroll_line_down -# map cmd+down scroll_line_down -# map kitty_mod+page_up scroll_page_up -# map cmd+page_up scroll_page_up -# map kitty_mod+page_down scroll_page_down -# map cmd+page_down scroll_page_down -# map kitty_mod+home scroll_home -# map cmd+home scroll_home -# map kitty_mod+end scroll_end -# map cmd+end scroll_end -# map kitty_mod+h show_scrollback - -#: You can pipe the contents of the current screen + history buffer as -#: STDIN to an arbitrary program using the ``launch`` function. For -#: example, the following opens the scrollback buffer in less in an -#: overlay window:: - -#: map f1 launch --stdin-source=@screen_scrollback --stdin-add-formatting --type=overlay less +G -R - -#: For more details on piping screen and buffer contents to external -#: programs, see launch. - -#: }}} - -#: Window management {{{ - -# map kitty_mod+enter new_window - -#: You can open a new window running an arbitrary program, for -#: example:: - -#: map kitty_mod+y launch mutt - -#: You can open a new window with the current working directory set to -#: the working directory of the current window using:: - -#: map ctrl+alt+enter launch --cwd=current - -#: You can open a new window that is allowed to control kitty via the -#: kitty remote control facility by prefixing the command line with @. -#: Any programs running in that window will be allowed to control -#: kitty. For example:: - -#: map ctrl+enter launch --allow-remote-control some_program - -#: You can open a new window next to the currently active window or as -#: the first window, with:: - -#: map ctrl+n launch --location=neighbor some_program -#: map ctrl+f launch --location=first some_program - -#: For more details, see launch. - -# map cmd+enter new_window -# map kitty_mod+n new_os_window - -#: Works like new_window above, except that it opens a top level OS -#: kitty window. In particular you can use new_os_window_with_cwd to -#: open a window with the current working directory. - -# map cmd+n new_os_window -# map kitty_mod+w close_window -# map shift+cmd+d close_window -# map kitty_mod+] next_window -# map kitty_mod+[ previous_window -# map kitty_mod+f move_window_forward -# map kitty_mod+b move_window_backward -# map kitty_mod+` move_window_to_top -# map kitty_mod+r start_resizing_window -# map cmd+r start_resizing_window -# map kitty_mod+1 first_window -# map cmd+1 first_window -# map kitty_mod+2 second_window -# map cmd+2 second_window -# map kitty_mod+3 third_window -# map cmd+3 third_window -# map kitty_mod+4 fourth_window -# map cmd+4 fourth_window -# map kitty_mod+5 fifth_window -# map cmd+5 fifth_window -# map kitty_mod+6 sixth_window -# map cmd+6 sixth_window -# map kitty_mod+7 seventh_window -# map cmd+7 seventh_window -# map kitty_mod+8 eighth_window -# map cmd+8 eighth_window -# map kitty_mod+9 ninth_window -# map cmd+9 ninth_window -# map kitty_mod+0 tenth_window -#: }}} - -#: Tab management {{{ - -# map kitty_mod+right next_tab -# map ctrl+tab next_tab -# map shift+cmd+] next_tab -# map kitty_mod+left previous_tab -# map shift+ctrl+tab previous_tab -# map shift+cmd+[ previous_tab -# map kitty_mod+t new_tab -# map cmd+t new_tab -# map kitty_mod+q close_tab -# map cmd+w close_tab -# map shift+cmd+w close_os_window -# map kitty_mod+. move_tab_forward -# map kitty_mod+, move_tab_backward -# map kitty_mod+alt+t set_tab_title -# map shift+cmd+i set_tab_title - -#: You can also create shortcuts to go to specific tabs, with 1 being -#: the first tab, 2 the second tab and -1 being the previously active -#: tab, and any number larger than the last tab being the last tab:: - -#: map ctrl+alt+1 goto_tab 1 -#: map ctrl+alt+2 goto_tab 2 - -#: Just as with new_window above, you can also pass the name of -#: arbitrary commands to run when using new_tab and use -#: new_tab_with_cwd. Finally, if you want the new tab to open next to -#: the current tab rather than at the end of the tabs list, use:: - -#: map ctrl+t new_tab !neighbor [optional cmd to run] -#: }}} - -#: Layout management {{{ - -# map kitty_mod+l next_layout - -#: You can also create shortcuts to switch to specific layouts:: - -#: map ctrl+alt+t goto_layout tall -#: map ctrl+alt+s goto_layout stack - -#: Similarly, to switch back to the previous layout:: - -#: map ctrl+alt+p last_used_layout -#: }}} - -#: Font sizes {{{ - -#: You can change the font size for all top-level kitty OS windows at -#: a time or only the current one. - -# map kitty_mod+equal change_font_size all +2.0 -# map cmd+plus change_font_size all +2.0 -# map cmd+shift+equal change_font_size all +2.0 -# map kitty_mod+minus change_font_size all -2.0 -# map cmd+minus change_font_size all -2.0 -# map kitty_mod+backspace change_font_size all 0 -# map cmd+0 change_font_size all 0 - -#: To setup shortcuts for specific font sizes:: - -#: map kitty_mod+f6 change_font_size all 10.0 - -#: To setup shortcuts to change only the current OS window's font -#: size:: - -#: map kitty_mod+f6 change_font_size current 10.0 -#: }}} - -#: Select and act on visible text {{{ - -#: Use the hints kitten to select text and either pass it to an -#: external program or insert it into the terminal or copy it to the -#: clipboard. - -# map kitty_mod+e kitten hints - -#: Open a currently visible URL using the keyboard. The program used -#: to open the URL is specified in open_url_with. - -# map kitty_mod+p>f kitten hints --type path --program - - -#: Select a path/filename and insert it into the terminal. Useful, for -#: instance to run git commands on a filename output from a previous -#: git command. - -# map kitty_mod+p>shift+f kitten hints --type path - -#: Select a path/filename and open it with the default open program. - -# map kitty_mod+p>l kitten hints --type line --program - - -#: Select a line of text and insert it into the terminal. Use for the -#: output of things like: ls -1 - -# map kitty_mod+p>w kitten hints --type word --program - - -#: Select words and insert into terminal. - -# map kitty_mod+p>h kitten hints --type hash --program - - -#: Select something that looks like a hash and insert it into the -#: terminal. Useful with git, which uses sha1 hashes to identify -#: commits - -# map kitty_mod+p>n kitten hints --type linenum - -#: Select something that looks like filename:linenum and open it in -#: vim at the specified line number. - -# map kitty_mod+p>y kitten hints --type hyperlink - -#: Select a hyperlink (i.e. a URL that has been marked as such by the -#: terminal program, for example, by ls --hyperlink=auto). - - -#: The hints kitten has many more modes of operation that you can map -#: to different shortcuts. For a full description see kittens/hints. -#: }}} - -#: Miscellaneous {{{ - -# map kitty_mod+f11 toggle_fullscreen -# map kitty_mod+f10 toggle_maximized -# map kitty_mod+u kitten unicode_input -# map kitty_mod+f2 edit_config_file -# map kitty_mod+escape kitty_shell window - -#: Open the kitty shell in a new window/tab/overlay/os_window to -#: control kitty using commands. - -# map kitty_mod+a>m set_background_opacity +0.1 -# map kitty_mod+a>l set_background_opacity -0.1 -# map kitty_mod+a>1 set_background_opacity 1 -# map kitty_mod+a>d set_background_opacity default -# map kitty_mod+delete clear_terminal reset active - -#: You can create shortcuts to clear/reset the terminal. For example:: - -#: # Reset the terminal -#: map kitty_mod+f9 clear_terminal reset active -#: # Clear the terminal screen by erasing all contents -#: map kitty_mod+f10 clear_terminal clear active -#: # Clear the terminal scrollback by erasing it -#: map kitty_mod+f11 clear_terminal scrollback active -#: # Scroll the contents of the screen into the scrollback -#: map kitty_mod+f12 clear_terminal scroll active - -#: If you want to operate on all windows instead of just the current -#: one, use all instead of active. - -#: It is also possible to remap Ctrl+L to both scroll the current -#: screen contents into the scrollback buffer and clear the screen, -#: instead of just clearing the screen:: - -#: map ctrl+l combine : clear_terminal scroll active : send_text normal,application \x0c - - -#: You can tell kitty to send arbitrary (UTF-8) encoded text to the -#: client program when pressing specified shortcut keys. For example:: - -#: map ctrl+alt+a send_text all Special text - -#: This will send "Special text" when you press the ctrl+alt+a key -#: combination. The text to be sent is a python string literal so you -#: can use escapes like \x1b to send control codes or \u21fb to send -#: unicode characters (or you can just input the unicode characters -#: directly as UTF-8 text). The first argument to send_text is the -#: keyboard modes in which to activate the shortcut. The possible -#: values are normal or application or kitty or a comma separated -#: combination of them. The special keyword all means all modes. The -#: modes normal and application refer to the DECCKM cursor key mode -#: for terminals, and kitty refers to the special kitty extended -#: keyboard protocol. - -#: Another example, that outputs a word and then moves the cursor to -#: the start of the line (same as pressing the Home key):: - -#: map ctrl+alt+a send_text normal Word\x1b[H -#: map ctrl+alt+a send_text application Word\x1bOH - -#: }}} - -# }}} diff --git a/_desktop/kitty/kitty.conf b/_desktop/kitty/kitty.conf index 86c60b7..c6d58bb 100644 --- a/_desktop/kitty/kitty.conf +++ b/_desktop/kitty/kitty.conf @@ -1,68 +1,772 @@ -# vim:fileencoding=utf-8:ft=conf:foldmethod=marker +# vim:fileencoding=utf-8:foldmethod=marker #: Fonts {{{ -font_family JetBrainsMono Nerd Font Mono Medium -bold_font JetBrainsMono Nerd Font Mono Bold -italic_font JetBrainsMono Nerd Font Mono Medium Italic -bold_italic_font JetBrainsMono Nerd Font Mono Bold Italic -font_size 14.0 +#: kitty has very powerful font management. You can configure +#: individual font faces and even specify special fonts for particular +#: characters. -adjust_line_height -5 +font_family JetBrains Mono Medium Nerd Font Complete Mono +bold_font JetBrains Mono Bold Nerd Font Complete Mono +italic_font JetBrains Mono Italic Nerd Font Complete Mono +bold_italic_font JetBrains Mono Bold Italic Nerd Font Complete Mono + +#: You can specify different fonts for the bold/italic/bold-italic +#: variants. To get a full list of supported fonts use the `kitty +#: list-fonts` command. By default they are derived automatically, by +#: the OSes font system. Setting them manually is useful for font +#: families that have many weight variants like Book, Medium, Thick, +#: etc. For example:: + +#: font_family Operator Mono Book +#: bold_font Operator Mono Medium +#: italic_font Operator Mono Book Italic +#: bold_italic_font Operator Mono Medium Italic + +font_size 11.0 + +#: Font size (in pts) + +force_ltr no + +#: kitty does not support BIDI (bidirectional text), however, for RTL +#: scripts, words are automatically displayed in RTL. That is to say, +#: in an RTL script, the words "HELLO WORLD" display in kitty as +#: "WORLD HELLO", and if you try to select a substring of an RTL- +#: shaped string, you will get the character that would be there had +#: the the string been LTR. For example, assuming the Hebrew word +#: ירושלים, selecting the character that on the screen appears to be ם +#: actually writes into the selection buffer the character י. kitty's +#: default behavior is useful in conjunction with a filter to reverse +#: the word order, however, if you wish to manipulate RTL glyphs, it +#: can be very challenging to work with, so this option is provided to +#: turn it off. Furthermore, this option can be used with the command +#: line program GNU FriBidi +#: to get BIDI +#: support, because it will force kitty to always treat the text as +#: LTR, which FriBidi expects for terminals. + +adjust_line_height 0 adjust_column_width -1 + +#: Change the size of each character cell kitty renders. You can use +#: either numbers, which are interpreted as pixels or percentages +#: (number followed by %), which are interpreted as percentages of the +#: unmodified values. You can use negative pixels or percentages less +#: than 100% to reduce sizes (but this might cause rendering +#: artifacts). + +adjust_baseline 0 + +#: Adjust the vertical alignment of text (the height in the cell at +#: which text is positioned). You can use either numbers, which are +#: interpreted as pixels or a percentages (number followed by %), +#: which are interpreted as the percentage of the line height. A +#: positive value moves the baseline up, and a negative value moves +#: them down. The underline and strikethrough positions are adjusted +#: accordingly. + +# symbol_map U+E0A0-U+E0A3,U+E0C0-U+E0C7 PowerlineSymbols + +#: Map the specified unicode codepoints to a particular font. Useful +#: if you need special rendering for some symbols, such as for +#: Powerline. Avoids the need for patched fonts. Each unicode code +#: point is specified in the form U+. You +#: can specify multiple code points, separated by commas and ranges +#: separated by hyphens. symbol_map itself can be specified multiple +#: times. Syntax is:: + +#: symbol_map codepoints Font Family Name + +disable_ligatures never + +#: Choose how you want to handle multi-character ligatures. The +#: default is to always render them. You can tell kitty to not render +#: them when the cursor is over them by using cursor to make editing +#: easier, or have kitty never render them at all by using always, if +#: you don't like them. The ligature strategy can be set per-window +#: either using the kitty remote control facility or by defining +#: shortcuts for it in kitty.conf, for example:: + +#: map alt+1 disable_ligatures_in active always +#: map alt+2 disable_ligatures_in all never +#: map alt+3 disable_ligatures_in tab cursor + +#: Note that this refers to programming ligatures, typically +#: implemented using the calt OpenType feature. For disabling general +#: ligatures, use the font_features setting. + +# font_features none + +#: Choose exactly which OpenType features to enable or disable. This +#: is useful as some fonts might have features worthwhile in a +#: terminal. For example, Fira Code Retina includes a discretionary +#: feature, zero, which in that font changes the appearance of the +#: zero (0), to make it more easily distinguishable from Ø. Fira Code +#: Retina also includes other discretionary features known as +#: Stylistic Sets which have the tags ss01 through ss20. + +#: For the exact syntax to use for individual features, see the +#: Harfbuzz documentation . + +#: Note that this code is indexed by PostScript name, and not the font +#: family. This allows you to define very precise feature settings; +#: e.g. you can disable a feature in the italic font but not in the +#: regular font. + +#: On Linux, these are read from the FontConfig database first and +#: then this, setting is applied, so they can be configured in a +#: single, central place. + +#: To get the PostScript name for a font, use kitty + list-fonts +#: --psnames: + +#: .. code-block:: sh + +#: $ kitty + list-fonts --psnames | grep Fira +#: Fira Code +#: Fira Code Bold (FiraCode-Bold) +#: Fira Code Light (FiraCode-Light) +#: Fira Code Medium (FiraCode-Medium) +#: Fira Code Regular (FiraCode-Regular) +#: Fira Code Retina (FiraCode-Retina) + +#: The part in brackets is the PostScript name. + +#: Enable alternate zero and oldstyle numerals:: + +#: font_features FiraCode-Retina +zero +onum + +#: Enable only alternate zero:: + +#: font_features FiraCode-Retina +zero + +#: Disable the normal ligatures, but keep the calt feature which (in +#: this font) breaks up monotony:: + +#: font_features TT2020StyleB-Regular -liga +calt + +#: In conjunction with force_ltr, you may want to disable Arabic +#: shaping entirely, and only look at their isolated forms if they +#: show up in a document. You can do this with e.g.:: + +#: font_features UnifontMedium +isol -medi -fina -init + +box_drawing_scale 0.001, 1, 1.5, 2 + +#: Change the sizes of the lines used for the box drawing unicode +#: characters These values are in pts. They will be scaled by the +#: monitor DPI to arrive at a pixel value. There must be four values +#: corresponding to thin, normal, thick, and very thick lines. + #: }}} #: Cursor customization {{{ cursor #c7c7c7 + +#: Default cursor color + cursor_text_color #161616 + +#: Choose the color of text under the cursor. If you want it rendered +#: with the background color of the cell underneath instead, use the +#: special keyword: background + cursor_shape beam -cursor_blink_interval 0 + +#: The cursor shape can be one of (block, beam, underline). Note that +#: when reloading the config this will be changed only if the cursor +#: shape has not been set by the program running in the terminal. + +cursor_beam_thickness 1.5 + +#: Defines the thickness of the beam cursor (in pts) + +cursor_underline_thickness 2.0 + +#: Defines the thickness of the underline cursor (in pts) + +cursor_blink_interval -1 + +#: The interval (in seconds) at which to blink the cursor. Set to zero +#: to disable blinking. Negative values mean use system default. Note +#: that numbers smaller than repaint_delay will be limited to +#: repaint_delay. + +cursor_stop_blinking_after 15.0 + +#: Stop blinking cursor after the specified number of seconds of +#: keyboard inactivity. Set to zero to never stop blinking. + +#: }}} + +#: Scrollback {{{ + +scrollback_lines 2000 + +#: Number of lines of history to keep in memory for scrolling back. +#: Memory is allocated on demand. Negative numbers are (effectively) +#: infinite scrollback. Note that using very large scrollback is not +#: recommended as it can slow down performance of the terminal and +#: also use large amounts of RAM. Instead, consider using +#: scrollback_pager_history_size. Note that on config reload if this +#: is changed it will only affect newly created windows, not existing +#: ones. + +scrollback_pager less --chop-long-lines --RAW-CONTROL-CHARS +INPUT_LINE_NUMBER + +#: Program with which to view scrollback in a new window. The +#: scrollback buffer is passed as STDIN to this program. If you change +#: it, make sure the program you use can handle ANSI escape sequences +#: for colors and text formatting. INPUT_LINE_NUMBER in the command +#: line above will be replaced by an integer representing which line +#: should be at the top of the screen. Similarly CURSOR_LINE and +#: CURSOR_COLUMN will be replaced by the current cursor position. + +scrollback_pager_history_size 0 + +#: Separate scrollback history size, used only for browsing the +#: scrollback buffer (in MB). This separate buffer is not available +#: for interactive scrolling but will be piped to the pager program +#: when viewing scrollback buffer in a separate window. The current +#: implementation stores the data in UTF-8, so approximatively 10000 +#: lines per megabyte at 100 chars per line, for pure ASCII text, +#: unformatted text. A value of zero or less disables this feature. +#: The maximum allowed size is 4GB. Note that on config reload if this +#: is changed it will only affect newly created windows, not existing +#: ones. + +scrollback_fill_enlarged_window no + +#: Fill new space with lines from the scrollback buffer after +#: enlarging a window. + +wheel_scroll_multiplier 5.0 + +#: Modify the amount scrolled by the mouse wheel. Note this is only +#: used for low precision scrolling devices, not for high precision +#: scrolling on platforms such as macOS and Wayland. Use negative +#: numbers to change scroll direction. + +touch_scroll_multiplier 1.0 + +#: Modify the amount scrolled by a touchpad. Note this is only used +#: for high precision scrolling devices on platforms such as macOS and +#: Wayland. Use negative numbers to change scroll direction. + #: }}} #: Mouse {{{ -mouse_hide_wait -1 -# url_color #0087bd -url_style single -strip_trailing_spaces always -focus_follows_mouse yes +mouse_hide_wait 3.0 + +#: Hide mouse cursor after the specified number of seconds of the +#: mouse not being used. Set to zero to disable mouse cursor hiding. +#: Set to a negative value to hide the mouse cursor immediately when +#: typing text. Disabled by default on macOS as getting it to work +#: robustly with the ever-changing sea of bugs that is Cocoa is too +#: much effort. + +url_color #0087bd +url_style curly + +#: The color and style for highlighting URLs on mouse-over. url_style +#: can be one of: none, single, double, curly + +open_url_with default + +#: The program with which to open URLs that are clicked on. The +#: special value default means to use the operating system's default +#: URL handler. + +url_prefixes http https file ftp gemini irc gopher mailto news git + +#: The set of URL prefixes to look for when detecting a URL under the +#: mouse cursor. + +detect_urls yes + +#: Detect URLs under the mouse. Detected URLs are highlighted with an +#: underline and the mouse cursor becomes a hand over them. Even if +#: this option is disabled, URLs are still clickable. + +url_excluded_characters + +#: Additional characters to be disallowed from URLs, when detecting +#: URLs under the mouse cursor. By default, all characters legal in +#: URLs are allowed. + +copy_on_select no + +#: Copy to clipboard or a private buffer on select. With this set to +#: clipboard, simply selecting text with the mouse will cause the text +#: to be copied to clipboard. Useful on platforms such as macOS that +#: do not have the concept of primary selections. You can instead +#: specify a name such as a1 to copy to a private kitty buffer +#: instead. Map a shortcut with the paste_from_buffer action to paste +#: from this private buffer. For example:: + +#: map cmd+shift+v paste_from_buffer a1 + +#: Note that copying to the clipboard is a security risk, as all +#: programs, including websites open in your browser can read the +#: contents of the system clipboard. + +strip_trailing_spaces never + +#: Remove spaces at the end of lines when copying to clipboard. A +#: value of smart will do it when using normal selections, but not +#: rectangle selections. always will always do it. + +select_by_word_characters @-./_~?&=%+# + +#: Characters considered part of a word when double clicking. In +#: addition to these characters any character that is marked as an +#: alphanumeric character in the unicode database will be matched. + +click_interval -1.0 + +#: The interval between successive clicks to detect double/triple +#: clicks (in seconds). Negative numbers will use the system default +#: instead, if available, or fallback to 0.5. + +focus_follows_mouse no + +#: Set the active window to the window under the mouse when moving the +#: mouse around + +pointer_shape_when_grabbed arrow + +#: The shape of the mouse pointer when the program running in the +#: terminal grabs the mouse. Valid values are: arrow, beam and hand + +default_pointer_shape beam + +#: The default shape of the mouse pointer. Valid values are: arrow, +#: beam and hand + +pointer_shape_when_dragging beam + +#: The default shape of the mouse pointer when dragging across text. +#: Valid values are: arrow, beam and hand + +#: Mouse actions {{{ + +#: Mouse buttons can be remapped to perform arbitrary actions. The +#: syntax for doing so is: + +#: .. code-block:: none + +#: mouse_map button-name event-type modes action + +#: Where ``button-name`` is one of ``left``, ``middle``, ``right`` or +#: ``b1 ... b8`` with added keyboard modifiers, for example: +#: ``ctrl+shift+left`` refers to holding the ctrl+shift keys while +#: clicking with the left mouse button. The number ``b1 ... b8`` can +#: be used to refer to upto eight buttons on a mouse. + +#: ``event-type`` is one ``press``, ``release``, ``doublepress``, +#: ``triplepress``, ``click`` and ``doubleclick``. ``modes`` +#: indicates whether the action is performed when the mouse is grabbed +#: by the program running in the terminal, or not. It can have one or +#: more or the values, ``grabbed,ungrabbed``. ``grabbed`` refers to +#: when the program running in the terminal has requested mouse +#: events. Note that the click and double click events have a delay of +#: click_interval to disambiguate from double and triple presses. + +#: You can run kitty with the kitty --debug-input command line option +#: to see mouse events. See the builtin actions below to get a sense +#: of what is possible. + +#: If you want to unmap an action map it to ``no-op``. For example, to +#: disable opening of URLs with a plain click:: + +#: mouse_map left click ungrabbed no-op + +#: .. note:: +#: Once a selection is started, releasing the button that started it will +#: automatically end it and no release event will be dispatched. + +clear_all_mouse_actions no + +#: You can have kitty remove all mouse actions seen up to this point. +#: Useful, for instance, to remove the default mouse actions. + +mouse_map left click ungrabbed mouse_click_url_or_select +mouse_map shift+left click grabbed,ungrabbed mouse_click_url_or_select +mouse_map ctrl+shift+left release grabbed,ungrabbed mouse_click_url + +#: Variant with ctrl+shift is present because the simple click based +#: version has an unavoidable delay of click_interval, to disambiguate +#: clicks from double clicks. + +mouse_map ctrl+shift+left press grabbed discard_event + +#: Prevent this press event from being sent to the program that has +#: grabbed the mouse, as the corresponding release event is used to +#: open a URL. + +mouse_map middle release ungrabbed paste_from_selection +mouse_map left press ungrabbed mouse_selection normal +mouse_map ctrl+alt+left press ungrabbed mouse_selection rectangle +mouse_map left doublepress ungrabbed mouse_selection word +mouse_map left triplepress ungrabbed mouse_selection line + +#: Select the entire line + +mouse_map ctrl+alt+left triplepress ungrabbed mouse_selection line_from_point + +#: Select from the clicked point to the end of the line + +mouse_map right press ungrabbed mouse_selection extend + +#: If you want only the end of the selection to be moved instead of +#: the nearest boundary, use move-end instead of extend. + +mouse_map shift+middle release ungrabbed,grabbed paste_selection +mouse_map shift+left press ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection normal +mouse_map shift+ctrl+alt+left press ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection rectangle +mouse_map shift+left doublepress ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection word +mouse_map shift+left triplepress ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection line + +#: Select the entire line + +mouse_map shift+ctrl+alt+left triplepress ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection line_from_point + +#: Select from the clicked point to the end of the line + +mouse_map shift+right press ungrabbed,grabbed mouse_selection extend +#: }}} + +#: }}} + +#: Performance tuning {{{ + +repaint_delay 10 + +#: Delay (in milliseconds) between screen updates. Decreasing it, +#: increases frames-per-second (FPS) at the cost of more CPU usage. +#: The default value yields ~100 FPS which is more than sufficient for +#: most uses. Note that to actually achieve 100 FPS you have to either +#: set sync_to_monitor to no or use a monitor with a high refresh +#: rate. Also, to minimize latency when there is pending input to be +#: processed, repaint_delay is ignored. + +input_delay 3 + +#: Delay (in milliseconds) before input from the program running in +#: the terminal is processed. Note that decreasing it will increase +#: responsiveness, but also increase CPU usage and might cause flicker +#: in full screen programs that redraw the entire screen on each loop, +#: because kitty is so fast that partial screen updates will be drawn. + +sync_to_monitor yes + +#: Sync screen updates to the refresh rate of the monitor. This +#: prevents tearing (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screen_tearing) +#: when scrolling. However, it limits the rendering speed to the +#: refresh rate of your monitor. With a very high speed mouse/high +#: keyboard repeat rate, you may notice some slight input latency. If +#: so, set this to no. + #: }}} #: Terminal bell {{{ -enable_audio_bell no +enable_audio_bell yes + +#: Enable/disable the audio bell. Useful in environments that require +#: silence. + visual_bell_duration 0.0 + +#: Visual bell duration. Flash the screen when a bell occurs for the +#: specified number of seconds. Set to zero to disable. + window_alert_on_bell yes + +#: Request window attention on bell. Makes the dock icon bounce on +#: macOS or the taskbar flash on linux. + +bell_on_tab yes + +#: Show a bell symbol on the tab if a bell occurs in one of the +#: windows in the tab and the window is not the currently focused +#: window + +command_on_bell none + +#: Program to run when a bell occurs. The environment variable +#: KITTY_CHILD_CMDLINE can be used to get the program running in the +#: window in which the bell occurred. + #: }}} #: Window layout {{{ -remember_window_size no -initial_window_width 180c -initial_window_height 50c -window_padding_width 0 5 +remember_window_size yes +initial_window_width 640 +initial_window_height 400 + +#: If enabled, the window size will be remembered so that new +#: instances of kitty will have the same size as the previous +#: instance. If disabled, the window will initially have size +#: configured by initial_window_width/height, in pixels. You can use a +#: suffix of "c" on the width/height values to have them interpreted +#: as number of cells instead of pixels. + +enabled_layouts * + +#: The enabled window layouts. A comma separated list of layout names. +#: The special value all means all layouts. The first listed layout +#: will be used as the startup layout. Default configuration is all +#: layouts in alphabetical order. For a list of available layouts, see +#: the https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/overview/#layouts. + +window_resize_step_cells 2 +window_resize_step_lines 2 + +#: The step size (in units of cell width/cell height) to use when +#: resizing windows. The cells value is used for horizontal resizing +#: and the lines value for vertical resizing. + +window_border_width 0.5pt + +#: The width of window borders. Can be either in pixels (px) or pts +#: (pt). Values in pts will be rounded to the nearest number of pixels +#: based on screen resolution. If not specified the unit is assumed to +#: be pts. Note that borders are displayed only when more than one +#: window is visible. They are meant to separate multiple windows. + +draw_minimal_borders no + +#: Draw only the minimum borders needed. This means that only the +#: minimum needed borders for inactive windows are drawn. That is only +#: the borders that separate the inactive window from a neighbor. Note +#: that setting a non-zero window margin overrides this and causes all +#: borders to be drawn. + +window_margin_width 0 + +#: The window margin (in pts) (blank area outside the border). A +#: single value sets all four sides. Two values set the vertical and +#: horizontal sides. Three values set top, horizontal and bottom. Four +#: values set top, right, bottom and left. + +single_window_margin_width -1 + +#: The window margin (in pts) to use when only a single window is +#: visible. Negative values will cause the value of +#: window_margin_width to be used instead. A single value sets all +#: four sides. Two values set the vertical and horizontal sides. Three +#: values set top, horizontal and bottom. Four values set top, right, +#: bottom and left. + +window_padding_width 1 3 7 + +#: The window padding (in pts) (blank area between the text and the +#: window border). A single value sets all four sides. Two values set +#: the vertical and horizontal sides. Three values set top, horizontal +#: and bottom. Four values set top, right, bottom and left. + +placement_strategy center + +#: When the window size is not an exact multiple of the cell size, the +#: cell area of the terminal window will have some extra padding on +#: the sides. You can control how that padding is distributed with +#: this option. Using a value of center means the cell area will be +#: placed centrally. A value of top-left means the padding will be on +#: only the bottom and right edges. + +active_border_color #00ff00 + +#: The color for the border of the active window. Set this to none to +#: not draw borders around the active window. + +inactive_border_color #cccccc + +#: The color for the border of inactive windows + +bell_border_color #ff5a00 + +#: The color for the border of inactive windows in which a bell has +#: occurred + +inactive_text_alpha 1.0 + +#: Fade the text in inactive windows by the specified amount (a number +#: between zero and one, with zero being fully faded). + hide_window_decorations no + +#: Hide the window decorations (title-bar and window borders) with +#: yes. On macOS, titlebar-only can be used to only hide the titlebar. +#: Whether this works and exactly what effect it has depends on the +#: window manager/operating system. Note that the effects of changing +#: this setting when reloading config are undefined. + +resize_debounce_time 0.1 + +#: The time (in seconds) to wait before redrawing the screen when a +#: resize event is received. On platforms such as macOS, where the +#: operating system sends events corresponding to the start and end of +#: a resize, this number is ignored. + +resize_draw_strategy static + +#: Choose how kitty draws a window while a resize is in progress. A +#: value of static means draw the current window contents, mostly +#: unchanged. A value of scale means draw the current window contents +#: scaled. A value of blank means draw a blank window. A value of size +#: means show the window size in cells. + +resize_in_steps no + +#: Resize the OS window in steps as large as the cells, instead of +#: with the usual pixel accuracy. Combined with an +#: initial_window_width and initial_window_height in number of cells, +#: this option can be used to keep the margins as small as possible +#: when resizing the OS window. Note that this does not currently work +#: on Wayland. + +confirm_os_window_close 0 + +#: Ask for confirmation when closing an OS window or a tab that has at +#: least this number of kitty windows in it. A value of zero disables +#: confirmation. This confirmation also applies to requests to quit +#: the entire application (all OS windows, via the quit action). + #: }}} #: Tab bar {{{ -tab_bar_edge top +tab_bar_edge bottom + +#: Which edge to show the tab bar on, top or bottom + +tab_bar_margin_width 0.0 + +#: The margin to the left and right of the tab bar (in pts) + +tab_bar_margin_height 0.0 0.0 + +#: The margin above and below the tab bar (in pts). The first number +#: is the margin between the edge of the OS Window and the tab bar and +#: the second number is the margin between the tab bar and the +#: contents of the current tab. + tab_bar_style fade -active_tab_background #50b6d8 -active_tab_font_style normal -inactive_tab_background #c7c7c7 -inactive_tab_font_style italic + +#: The tab bar style, can be one of: + +#: fade +#: Each tab's edges fade into the background color (see tab_fade) +#: slant +#: Tabs look like the tabs in a physical file +#: separator +#: Tabs are separated by a configurable separator (see tab_separator) +#: powerline +#: Tabs are shown as a continuous line with "fancy" separators (see tab_powerline_style) +#: hidden +#: The tab bar is hidden. If you use this, you might want to create a mapping +#: for the https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/actions/#select-tab action which presents you with a list +#: of tabs and allows for easy switching to a tab. + +tab_bar_min_tabs 2 + +#: The minimum number of tabs that must exist before the tab bar is +#: shown + +tab_switch_strategy previous + +#: The algorithm to use when switching to a tab when the current tab +#: is closed. The default of previous will switch to the last used +#: tab. A value of left will switch to the tab to the left of the +#: closed tab. A value of right will switch to the tab to the right of +#: the closed tab. A value of last will switch to the right-most tab. + +tab_fade 0.25 0.5 0.75 1 + +#: Control how each tab fades into the background when using fade for +#: the tab_bar_style. Each number is an alpha (between zero and one) +#: that controls how much the corresponding cell fades into the +#: background, with zero being no fade and one being full fade. You +#: can change the number of cells used by adding/removing entries to +#: this list. + +tab_separator " ┇" + +#: The separator between tabs in the tab bar when using separator as +#: the tab_bar_style. + +tab_powerline_style angled + +#: The powerline separator style between tabs in the tab bar when +#: using powerline as the tab_bar_style, can be one of: angled, +#: slanted, or round. + +tab_activity_symbol none + +#: Some text or a unicode symbol to show on the tab if a window in the +#: tab that does not have focus has some activity. If you want to use +#: leading or trailing spaces surround the text with quotes. + +tab_title_template "{title}" + +#: A template to render the tab title. The default just renders the +#: title. If you wish to include the tab-index as well, use something +#: like: {index}: {title}. Useful if you have shortcuts mapped for +#: goto_tab N. If you prefer to see the index as a superscript, use +#: {sup.index}. In addition you can use {layout_name} for the current +#: layout name, {num_windows} for the number of windows in the tab and +#: {num_window_groups} for the number of window groups (not counting +#: overlay windows) in the tab. Note that formatting is done by +#: Python's string formatting machinery, so you can use, for instance, +#: {layout_name[:2].upper()} to show only the first two letters of the +#: layout name, upper-cased. If you want to style the text, you can +#: use styling directives, for example: +#: {fmt.fg.red}red{fmt.fg.default}normal{fmt.bg._00FF00}green +#: bg{fmt.bg.normal}. Similarly, for bold and italic: +#: {fmt.bold}bold{fmt.nobold}normal{fmt.italic}italic{fmt.noitalic}. + +active_tab_title_template none + +#: Template to use for active tabs, if not specified falls back to +#: tab_title_template. + +active_tab_foreground #000 +active_tab_background #eee +active_tab_font_style bold-italic +inactive_tab_foreground #444 +inactive_tab_background #999 +inactive_tab_font_style normal + +#: Tab bar colors and styles + +tab_bar_background none + +#: Background color for the tab bar. Defaults to using the terminal +#: background color. + #: }}} #: Color scheme {{{ foreground #c7c7c7 background #161616 -# background_opacity 1.0 +background_opacity 0.9 +background_image none +background_image_layout tiled +background_image_linear no +dynamic_background_opacity no +background_tint 0.0 +dim_opacity 0.75 selection_foreground #000000 selection_background #c1ddff +#: The color table {{{ color0 #161616 color1 #fd4285 color2 #a6e22d @@ -79,57 +783,617 @@ color12 #00bdff color13 #bd9eff color14 #5ed6fe color15 #feffff + +mark1_foreground black +mark1_background #98d3cb +mark2_foreground black +mark2_background #f2dcd3 +mark3_foreground black +mark3_background #f274bc +#: }}} + #: }}} #: Advanced {{{ +shell . + +#: The shell program to execute. The default value of . means to use +#: whatever shell is set as the default shell for the current user. +#: Note that on macOS if you change this, you might need to add +#: --login and --interactive to ensure that the shell starts in +#: interactive mode and reads its startup rc files. + +editor . + +#: The terminal editor (such as ``vim`` or ``nano``) to use when +#: editing the kitty config file or similar tasks. + +#: The default value of . means to use the environment variables +#: VISUAL and EDITOR in that order. If these variables aren't set, +#: kitty will run your shell (``$SHELL -l -i -c env``) to see if your +#: shell config files set VISUAL or EDITOR. If that doesn't work, +#: kitty will cycle through various known editors (``vim``, ``emacs``, +#: etc) and take the first one that exists on your system. + +close_on_child_death no + +#: Close the window when the child process (shell) exits. If no (the +#: default), the terminal will remain open when the child exits as +#: long as there are still processes outputting to the terminal (for +#: example disowned or backgrounded processes). If yes, the window +#: will close as soon as the child process exits. Note that setting it +#: to yes means that any background processes still using the terminal +#: can fail silently because their stdout/stderr/stdin no longer work. + +allow_remote_control no + +#: Allow other programs to control kitty. If you turn this on other +#: programs can control all aspects of kitty, including sending text +#: to kitty windows, opening new windows, closing windows, reading the +#: content of windows, etc. Note that this even works over ssh +#: connections. You can chose to either allow any program running +#: within kitty to control it, with yes or only programs that connect +#: to the socket specified with the kitty --listen-on command line +#: option, if you use the value socket-only. The latter is useful if +#: you want to prevent programs running on a remote computer over ssh +#: from controlling kitty. Reloading the config will not affect this +#: setting. + +listen_on none + +#: Tell kitty to listen to the specified unix/tcp socket for remote +#: control connections. Note that this will apply to all kitty +#: instances. It can be overridden by the kitty --listen-on command +#: line flag. This option accepts only UNIX sockets, such as +#: unix:${TEMP}/mykitty or (on Linux) unix:@mykitty. Environment +#: variables are expanded. If {kitty_pid} is present then it is +#: replaced by the PID of the kitty process, otherwise the PID of the +#: kitty process is appended to the value, with a hyphen. This option +#: is ignored unless you also set allow_remote_control to enable +#: remote control. See the help for kitty --listen-on for more +#: details. Changing this option by reloading the config is not +#: supported. + +# env + +#: Specify environment variables to set in all child processes. Note +#: that environment variables are expanded recursively, so if you +#: use:: + +#: env MYVAR1=a +#: env MYVAR2=${MYVAR1}/${HOME}/b + +#: The value of MYVAR2 will be a//b. + +update_check_interval 24 + +#: Periodically check if an update to kitty is available. If an update +#: is found a system notification is displayed informing you of the +#: available update. The default is to check every 24 hrs, set to zero +#: to disable. Changing this option by reloading the config is not +#: supported. + +startup_session none + +#: Path to a session file to use for all kitty instances. Can be +#: overridden by using the kitty --session command line option for +#: individual instances. See +#: https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/overview/#startup-sessions in the +#: kitty documentation for details. Note that relative paths are +#: interpreted with respect to the kitty config directory. Environment +#: variables in the path are expanded. Changing this option by +#: reloading the config is not supported. + +clipboard_control write-clipboard write-primary + +#: Allow programs running in kitty to read and write from the +#: clipboard. You can control exactly which actions are allowed. The +#: set of possible actions is: write-clipboard read-clipboard write- +#: primary read-primary. The default is to allow writing to the +#: clipboard and primary selection. Note that enabling the read +#: functionality is a security risk as it means that any program, even +#: one running on a remote server via SSH can read your clipboard. + +allow_hyperlinks yes + +#: Process hyperlink (OSC 8) escape sequences. If disabled OSC 8 +#: escape sequences are ignored. Otherwise they become clickable +#: links, that you can click by holding down ctrl+shift and clicking +#: with the mouse. The special value of ``ask`` means that kitty will +#: ask before opening the link. + term xterm-256color + +#: The value of the TERM environment variable to set. Changing this +#: can break many terminal programs, only change it if you know what +#: you are doing, not because you read some advice on Stack Overflow +#: to change it. The TERM variable is used by various programs to get +#: information about the capabilities and behavior of the terminal. If +#: you change it, depending on what programs you run, and how +#: different the terminal you are changing it to is, various things +#: from key-presses, to colors, to various advanced features may not +#: work. Changing this option by reloading the config will only affect +#: newly created windows. + +#: }}} + +#: OS specific tweaks {{{ + +wayland_titlebar_color system + +#: Change the color of the kitty window's titlebar on Wayland systems +#: with client side window decorations such as GNOME. A value of +#: system means to use the default system color, a value of background +#: means to use the background color of the currently active window +#: and finally you can use an arbitrary color, such as #12af59 or red. + +macos_titlebar_color system + +#: Change the color of the kitty window's titlebar on macOS. A value +#: of system means to use the default system color, a value of +#: background means to use the background color of the currently +#: active window and finally you can use an arbitrary color, such as +#: #12af59 or red. WARNING: This option works by using a hack, as +#: there is no proper Cocoa API for it. It sets the background color +#: of the entire window and makes the titlebar transparent. As such it +#: is incompatible with background_opacity. If you want to use both, +#: you are probably better off just hiding the titlebar with +#: hide_window_decorations. + +macos_option_as_alt no + +#: Use the option key as an alt key. With this set to no, kitty will +#: use the macOS native Option+Key = unicode character behavior. This +#: will break any Alt+key keyboard shortcuts in your terminal +#: programs, but you can use the macOS unicode input technique. You +#: can use the values: left, right, or both to use only the left, +#: right or both Option keys as Alt, instead. Changing this setting by +#: reloading the config is not supported. + +macos_hide_from_tasks no + +#: Hide the kitty window from running tasks (⌘+Tab) on macOS. Changing +#: this setting by reloading the config is not supported. + +macos_quit_when_last_window_closed no + +#: Have kitty quit when all the top-level windows are closed. By +#: default, kitty will stay running, even with no open windows, as is +#: the expected behavior on macOS. + +macos_window_resizable yes + +#: Disable this if you want kitty top-level (OS) windows to not be +#: resizable on macOS. Changing this setting by reloading the config +#: will only affect newly created windows. + +macos_thicken_font 0 + +#: Draw an extra border around the font with the given width, to +#: increase legibility at small font sizes. For example, a value of +#: 0.75 will result in rendering that looks similar to sub-pixel +#: antialiasing at common font sizes. + +macos_traditional_fullscreen no + +#: Use the traditional full-screen transition, that is faster, but +#: less pretty. + +macos_show_window_title_in all + +#: Show or hide the window title in the macOS window or menu-bar. A +#: value of window will show the title of the currently active window +#: at the top of the macOS window. A value of menubar will show the +#: title of the currently active window in the macOS menu-bar, making +#: use of otherwise wasted space. all will show the title everywhere +#: and none hides the title in the window and the menu-bar. + +macos_custom_beam_cursor no + +#: Enable/disable custom mouse cursor for macOS that is easier to see +#: on both light and dark backgrounds. WARNING: this might make your +#: mouse cursor invisible on dual GPU machines. Changing this setting +#: by reloading the config is not supported. + +linux_display_server auto + +#: Choose between Wayland and X11 backends. By default, an appropriate +#: backend based on the system state is chosen automatically. Set it +#: to x11 or wayland to force the choice. Changing this setting by +#: reloading the config is not supported. + #: }}} #: Keyboard shortcuts {{{ -kitty_mod cmd +#: Keys are identified simply by their lowercase unicode characters. +#: For example: ``a`` for the A key, ``[`` for the left square bracket +#: key, etc. For functional keys, such as ``Enter or Escape`` the +#: names are present at https://sw.kovidgoyal.net/kitty/keyboard- +#: protocol/#functional-key-definitions. For a list of modifier names, +#: see: GLFW mods + +#: On Linux you can also use XKB key names to bind keys that are not +#: supported by GLFW. See XKB keys +#: for a list of key names. The name to use is the part +#: after the XKB_KEY_ prefix. Note that you can only use an XKB key +#: name for keys that are not known as GLFW keys. + +#: Finally, you can use raw system key codes to map keys, again only +#: for keys that are not known as GLFW keys. To see the system key +#: code for a key, start kitty with the kitty --debug-input option. +#: Then kitty will output some debug text for every key event. In that +#: text look for ``native_code`` the value of that becomes the key +#: name in the shortcut. For example: + +#: .. code-block:: none + +#: on_key_input: glfw key: 65 native_code: 0x61 action: PRESS mods: 0x0 text: 'a' + +#: Here, the key name for the A key is 0x61 and you can use it with:: + +#: map ctrl+0x61 something + +#: to map ctrl+a to something. + +#: You can use the special action no_op to unmap a keyboard shortcut +#: that is assigned in the default configuration:: + +#: map kitty_mod+space no_op + +#: You can combine multiple actions to be triggered by a single +#: shortcut, using the syntax below:: + +#: map key combine action1 action2 action3 ... + +#: For example:: + +#: map kitty_mod+e combine : new_window : next_layout + +#: this will create a new window and switch to the next available +#: layout + +#: You can use multi-key shortcuts using the syntax shown below:: + +#: map key1>key2>key3 action + +#: For example:: + +#: map ctrl+f>2 set_font_size 20 + +#: The full list of actions that can be mapped to key presses is +#: available here . + +kitty_mod ctrl + +#: The value of kitty_mod is used as the modifier for all default +#: shortcuts, you can change it in your kitty.conf to change the +#: modifiers for all the default shortcuts. + clear_all_shortcuts yes +#: You can have kitty remove all shortcut definition seen up to this +#: point. Useful, for instance, to remove the default shortcuts. + +# kitten_alias hints hints --hints-offset=0 + +#: You can create aliases for kitten names, this allows overriding the +#: defaults for kitten options and can also be used to shorten +#: repeated mappings of the same kitten with a specific group of +#: options. For example, the above alias changes the default value of +#: kitty +kitten hints --hints-offset to zero for all mappings, +#: including the builtin ones. + #: Clipboard {{{ -map kitty_mod+c copy_to_clipboard -map kitty_mod+v paste_from_clipboard +map kitty_mod+shift+c copy_to_clipboard + +#: There is also a copy_or_interrupt action that can be optionally +#: mapped to Ctrl+c. It will copy only if there is a selection and +#: send an interrupt otherwise. Similarly, copy_and_clear_or_interrupt +#: will copy and clear the selection or send an interrupt if there is +#: no selection. + +map kitty_mod+shift+v paste_from_clipboard +map shift+insert paste_from_selection +#map kitty_mod+s paste_from_selection +#map kitty_mod+o pass_selection_to_program + +#: You can also pass the contents of the current selection to any +#: program using pass_selection_to_program. By default, the system's +#: open program is used, but you can specify your own, the selection +#: will be passed as a command line argument to the program, for +#: example:: + +#: map kitty_mod+o pass_selection_to_program firefox + +#: You can pass the current selection to a terminal program running in +#: a new kitty window, by using the @selection placeholder:: + +#: map kitty_mod+y new_window less @selection + +#: }}} + +#: Scrolling {{{ + +map kitty_mod+k scroll_line_up +map kitty_mod+j scroll_line_down +map kitty_mod+shift+k scroll_page_up +map kitty_mod+shift+j scroll_page_down +#map kitty_mod+h show_scrollback + +#: You can pipe the contents of the current screen + history buffer as +#: STDIN to an arbitrary program using the ``launch`` function. For +#: example, the following opens the scrollback buffer in less in an +#: overlay window:: + +#: map f1 launch --stdin-source=@screen_scrollback --stdin-add-formatting --type=overlay less +G -R + +#: For more details on piping screen and buffer contents to external +#: programs, see launch. + #: }}} #: Window management {{{ -map kitty_mod+enter new_window -map kitty_mod+n new_os_window -map kitty_mod+] next_window -map kitty_mod+[ previous_window -map kitty_mod+shift+r start_resizing_window +#map kitty_mod+enter new_window + +#: You can open a new window running an arbitrary program, for +#: example:: + +#: map kitty_mod+y launch mutt + +#: You can open a new window with the current working directory set to +#: the working directory of the current window using:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+enter launch --cwd=current + +#: You can open a new window that is allowed to control kitty via the +#: kitty remote control facility by prefixing the command line with @. +#: Any programs running in that window will be allowed to control +#: kitty. For example:: + +#: map ctrl+enter launch --allow-remote-control some_program + +#: You can open a new window next to the currently active window or as +#: the first window, with:: + +#: map ctrl+n launch --location=neighbor some_program +#: map ctrl+f launch --location=first some_program + +#: For more details, see launch. + +#map kitty_mod+n new_os_window + +#: Works like new_window above, except that it opens a top level OS +#: kitty window. In particular you can use new_os_window_with_cwd to +#: open a window with the current working directory. + +#map kitty_mod+w close_window +#map kitty_mod+] next_window +#map kitty_mod+[ previous_window +#map kitty_mod+f move_window_forward +#map kitty_mod+b move_window_backward +#map kitty_mod+` move_window_to_top +#map kitty_mod+r start_resizing_window +#map kitty_mod+1 first_window +#map kitty_mod+2 second_window +#map kitty_mod+3 third_window +#map kitty_mod+4 fourth_window +#map kitty_mod+5 fifth_window +#map kitty_mod+6 sixth_window +#map kitty_mod+7 seventh_window +#map kitty_mod+8 eighth_window +#map kitty_mod+9 ninth_window +#map kitty_mod+0 tenth_window #: }}} #: Tab management {{{ -map kitty_mod+shift+] next_tab -map kitty_mod+shift+[ previous_tab -map kitty_mod+t new_tab -map kitty_mod+w close_tab +#map kitty_mod+right next_tab +#map kitty_mod+left previous_tab +#map kitty_mod+t new_tab +#map kitty_mod+q close_tab +#map shift+cmd+w close_os_window +#map kitty_mod+. move_tab_forward +#map kitty_mod+, move_tab_backward +#map kitty_mod+alt+t set_tab_title + +#: You can also create shortcuts to go to specific tabs, with 1 being +#: the first tab, 2 the second tab and -1 being the previously active +#: tab, and any number larger than the last tab being the last tab:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+1 goto_tab 1 +#: map ctrl+alt+2 goto_tab 2 + +#: Just as with new_window above, you can also pass the name of +#: arbitrary commands to run when using new_tab and use +#: new_tab_with_cwd. Finally, if you want the new tab to open next to +#: the current tab rather than at the end of the tabs list, use:: + +#: map ctrl+t new_tab !neighbor [optional cmd to run] +#: }}} + +#: Layout management {{{ + +#map kitty_mod+l next_layout + +#: You can also create shortcuts to switch to specific layouts:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+t goto_layout tall +#: map ctrl+alt+s goto_layout stack + +#: Similarly, to switch back to the previous layout:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+p last_used_layout + +#: There is also a toggle layout function that switches to the named +#: layout or back to the previous layout if in the named layout. +#: Useful to temporarily "zoom" the active window by switching to the +#: stack layout:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+z toggle_layout stack #: }}} #: Font sizes {{{ -map kitty_mod+equal change_font_size all +2.0 -map kitty_mod+minus change_font_size all -2.0 -map kitty_mod+0 change_font_size all 0 +#: You can change the font size for all top-level kitty OS windows at +#: a time or only the current one. + +map kitty_mod+equal change_font_size all +1.0 +map kitty_mod+minus change_font_size all -1.0 +map kitty_mod+0 change_font_size all 0 + +#: To setup shortcuts for specific font sizes:: + +#: map kitty_mod+f6 change_font_size all 10.0 + +#: To setup shortcuts to change only the current OS window's font +#: size:: + +#: map kitty_mod+f6 change_font_size current 10.0 #: }}} #: Select and act on visible text {{{ -map kitty_mod+o kitten hints --customize-processing weechat-hints.py -map kitty_mod+p>l kitten hints --type line --program - -map kitty_mod+p>w kitten hints --type word --program - +#: Use the hints kitten to select text and either pass it to an +#: external program or insert it into the terminal or copy it to the +#: clipboard. + +map kitty_mod+o open_url_with_hints + +#: Open a currently visible URL using the keyboard. The program used +#: to open the URL is specified in open_url_with. + +#map kitty_mod+p>f kitten hints --type path --program - + +#: Select a path/filename and insert it into the terminal. Useful, for +#: instance to run git commands on a filename output from a previous +#: git command. + +#map kitty_mod+p>shift+f kitten hints --type path + +#: Select a path/filename and open it with the default open program. + +#map kitty_mod+p>l kitten hints --type line --program - + +#: Select a line of text and insert it into the terminal. Use for the +#: output of things like: ls -1 + +#map kitty_mod+p>w kitten hints --type word --program - + +#: Select words and insert into terminal. + +#map kitty_mod+p>h kitten hints --type hash --program - + +#: Select something that looks like a hash and insert it into the +#: terminal. Useful with git, which uses sha1 hashes to identify +#: commits + +#map kitty_mod+p>n kitten hints --type linenum + +#: Select something that looks like filename:linenum and open it in +#: vim at the specified line number. + +#map kitty_mod+p>y kitten hints --type hyperlink + +#: Select a hyperlink (i.e. a URL that has been marked as such by the +#: terminal program, for example, by ls --hyperlink=auto). + + +#: The hints kitten has many more modes of operation that you can map +#: to different shortcuts. For a full description see kittens/hints. #: }}} #: Miscellaneous {{{ -map kitty_mod+u kitten unicode_input +map kitty_mod+f11 toggle_fullscreen +#map kitty_mod+f10 toggle_maximized +map kitty_mod+shift+u kitten unicode_input +#map kitty_mod+f2 edit_config_file +#map kitty_mod+escape kitty_shell window + +#: Open the kitty shell in a new window/tab/overlay/os_window to +#: control kitty using commands. + +#map kitty_mod+a>m set_background_opacity +0.1 +#map kitty_mod+a>l set_background_opacity -0.1 +#map kitty_mod+a>1 set_background_opacity 1 +#map kitty_mod+a>d set_background_opacity default +#map kitty_mod+delete clear_terminal reset active + +#: You can create shortcuts to clear/reset the terminal. For example:: + +#: # Reset the terminal +#: map kitty_mod+f9 clear_terminal reset active +#: # Clear the terminal screen by erasing all contents +#: map kitty_mod+f10 clear_terminal clear active +#: # Clear the terminal scrollback by erasing it +#: map kitty_mod+f11 clear_terminal scrollback active +#: # Scroll the contents of the screen into the scrollback +#: map kitty_mod+f12 clear_terminal scroll active + +#: If you want to operate on all windows instead of just the current +#: one, use all instead of active. + +#: It is also possible to remap Ctrl+L to both scroll the current +#: screen contents into the scrollback buffer and clear the screen, +#: instead of just clearing the screen, for example, for ZSH add the +#: following to ~/.zshrc: + +#: .. code-block:: sh + +#: scroll-and-clear-screen() { +#: printf '\n%.0s' {1..$LINES} +#: zle clear-screen +#: } +#: zle -N scroll-and-clear-screen +#: bindkey '^l' scroll-and-clear-screen + +map kitty_mod+f5 load_config_file + +#: Reload kitty.conf, applying any changes since the last time it was +#: loaded. Note that a handful of settings cannot be dynamically +#: changed and require a full restart of kitty. You can also map a +#: keybinding to load a different config file, for example:: + +#: map f5 load_config /path/to/alternative/kitty.conf + +#: Note that all setting from the original kitty.conf are discarded, +#: in other words the new conf settings *replace* the old ones. + +#map kitty_mod+f6 debug_config + +#: Show details about exactly what configuration kitty is running with +#: and its host environment. Useful for debugging issues. + + +#: You can tell kitty to send arbitrary (UTF-8) encoded text to the +#: client program when pressing specified shortcut keys. For example:: + +#: map ctrl+alt+a send_text all Special text + +#: This will send "Special text" when you press the ctrl+alt+a key +#: combination. The text to be sent is a python string literal so you +#: can use escapes like \x1b to send control codes or \u21fb to send +#: unicode characters (or you can just input the unicode characters +#: directly as UTF-8 text). The first argument to send_text is the +#: keyboard modes in which to activate the shortcut. The possible +#: values are normal or application or kitty or a comma separated +#: combination of them. The special keyword all means all modes. The +#: modes normal and application refer to the DECCKM cursor key mode +#: for terminals, and kitty refers to the special kitty extended +#: keyboard protocol. + +#: Another example, that outputs a word and then moves the cursor to +#: the start of the line (same as pressing the Home key):: + +#: map ctrl+alt+a send_text normal Word\x1b[H +#: map ctrl+alt+a send_text application Word\x1bOH + #: }}} -# }}} + +#: }}} + diff --git a/_desktop/kitty/weechat-hints.py b/_desktop/kitty/weechat-hints.py deleted file mode 100644 index 07801fe..0000000 --- a/_desktop/kitty/weechat-hints.py +++ /dev/null @@ -1,90 +0,0 @@ -# Must be equal to the values of `weechat.look.separator_vertical` and -# `weechat.look.prefix_suffix`. -SEPARATOR = "│" -# How many separators to skip. For very narrow terminals or if you don't use a -# bufflist, you should probably set this to 2. -SEPARATOR_SKIP_COUNT = 3 -# How many characters to skip when the last separator (before the continuation -# of a message) is reached. For very narrow terminals, you should probably set -# this to 0 as WeeChat doesn't insert spaces after the separator in that case. -SEPARATOR_SUFFIX_SKIP_COUNT = 1 - - -def extract_url(text, pos, url_prefix): - """Extracts URL from `text` at `pos`, ignoring WeeChat's chrome.""" - url = "" - prefix_pos = 0 - start_pos = pos - reached_next_message = False - while True: - if pos >= len(text): - break - # We're at the end of the message on this line / start of the nicklist. - # We should keep skipping characters until we reach the start of the - # wrapped message on the next line. - if (text[pos] == " " and text[pos + 1] == SEPARATOR) or text[pos] == "\n": - count = 1 if text[pos] == "\n" else 0 - old_pos = pos - while True: - pos += 1 - if pos >= len(text): - break - if text[pos] == SEPARATOR: - # When a line is wrapped, the nick/nick prefix is not - # shown. If it is (i.e. if we don't find a space before the - # separator), then we've reached a new message and it's - # time to stop looking. - if count == SEPARATOR_SKIP_COUNT - 1 and text[pos - 2] != " ": - pos = old_pos - reached_next_message = True - break - count += 1 - if count == SEPARATOR_SKIP_COUNT: - pos += 1 + SEPARATOR_SUFFIX_SKIP_COUNT # Skip "| " portion. - break - # The URL is over. - elif text[pos] in [" ", "\0"]: - break - if pos >= len(text): - break - if reached_next_message: - break - # If the prefix (e.g. "https://") isn't matched, stop searching. - if prefix_pos < len(url_prefix) - 1 and text[pos] != url_prefix[prefix_pos]: - break - # This is the real start of a potential URL match (i.e. ignoring - # WeeChat decoration). - if prefix_pos == 0: - start_pos = pos - url += text[pos] - prefix_pos += 1 - pos += 1 - # Is the text we found actually a URL? - if not url.startswith(url_prefix): - url = None - return start_pos, pos, url - - -def mark(text, args, Mark, extra_cli_args, *a): - idx = 0 - start_pos = 0 - while start_pos < len(text): - # Extract URL, if any. - start_pos, end_pos, url = extract_url(text, start_pos, "https://") - if not url: - start_pos, end_pos, url = extract_url(text, start_pos, "http://") - if url: - # Return mark info for kitty. - yield Mark(idx, start_pos, end_pos, url, {}) - idx += 1 - start_pos = end_pos - start_pos += 1 - - -def handle_result(args, data, target_window_id, boss, extra_cli_args, *a): - matches, groupdicts = [], [] - for m, g in zip(data["match"], data["groupdicts"]): - if m: - matches.append(m), groupdicts.append(g) - for match, match_data in zip(matches, groupdicts): - boss.open_url(match) diff --git a/_suckless/dwm/config.h b/_suckless/dwm/config.h index 49f3353..e283e7f 100644 --- a/_suckless/dwm/config.h +++ b/_suckless/dwm/config.h @@ -30,7 +30,7 @@ typedef struct { const char *name; const void *cmd; } Sp; -const char *spcmd1[] = {"st", "-n", "spterm", "-g", "120x34", NULL }; +const char *spcmd1[] = {"kitty", "--name", "spterm", "-g", "120x34", NULL }; static Sp scratchpads[] = { /* name cmd */ {"spterm", spcmd1}, @@ -85,7 +85,7 @@ static const Layout layouts[] = { #define SHCMD(cmd) { .v = (const char*[]){ "/bin/sh", "-c", cmd, NULL } } /* commands */ -static const char *termcmd[] = { "st", NULL }; +static const char *termcmd[] = { "kitty", NULL }; #include @@ -120,8 +120,8 @@ static Key keys[] = { { SHTKEY, XK_m, zoom, {0} }, { SHTKEY, XK_h, setmfact, {.f = -0.05} }, { SHTKEY, XK_l, setmfact, {.f = +0.05} }, - { SHTKEY, XK_j, focusstack, {.i = +1 } }, - { SHTKEY, XK_k, focusstack, {.i = -1 } }, + { SHTKEY, XK_j, focusstack, {.i = -1 } }, + { SHTKEY, XK_k, focusstack, {.i = 11 } }, { SHTKEY, XK_f, togglefloating, {0} }, { SHTKEY, XK_equal, incnmaster, {.i = +1 } }, { SHTKEY, XK_minus, incnmaster, {.i = -1 } }, diff --git a/zsh/p10k.zsh b/zsh/p10k.zsh index b5104cf..7fdb1c3 100644 --- a/zsh/p10k.zsh +++ b/zsh/p10k.zsh @@ -46,10 +46,10 @@ # prompt symbol typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_OK_{VIINS,VICMD,VIVIS,VIOWR}_FOREGROUND=76 typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_ERROR_{VIINS,VICMD,VIVIS,VIOWR}_FOREGROUND=196 - typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIINS_CONTENT_EXPANSION='❯' - typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VICMD_CONTENT_EXPANSION='❯' - typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIVIS_CONTENT_EXPANSION='❯' - typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIOWR_CONTENT_EXPANSION='❯' + typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIINS_CONTENT_EXPANSION='λ' + typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VICMD_CONTENT_EXPANSION='λ' + typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIVIS_CONTENT_EXPANSION='λ' + typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_{OK,ERROR}_VIOWR_CONTENT_EXPANSION='λ' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_OVERWRITE_STATE=true typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_LEFT_PROMPT_LAST_SEGMENT_END_SYMBOL='' typeset -g POWERLEVEL9K_PROMPT_CHAR_LEFT_PROMPT_FIRST_SEGMENT_START_SYMBOL=