awesome-zsh-plugins/Writing_Plugins_and_Themes.md
Joe Block 99b1e47874 Update Writing Plugins & Themes
Add links to the ZSH Plugin Standard to `Writing_Plugins_and_Themes.md`.

Signed-off-by: Joe Block <jpb@unixorn.net>
2024-02-26 10:11:35 -07:00

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Writing Plugins and Themes

Here are some suggestions to make installing and using your plugin/theme as simple as possible for end users, no matter what ZSH framework (if any) they are using.

  1. Make using your plugin easier for end users and put the plugin file at the root level of your plugin repository instead of hiding it in a subdirectory. This allows oh-my-zsh users to install it with a simple git clone git@github.com:you/yourplugin.git in their custom/plugins directory and also lets Antigen and zgenom users let the framework automatically clone the repository without having to specify a subdirectory path.

  2. Only put one plugin or theme in a repository. This makes using it a simple git clone for oh-my-zsh users, and simpler for other framework users as well - they won't have to specify a subdirectory, just username/reponame.

  3. Only oh-my-zsh sets the ${ZSH_CUSTOM} variable. Relying on your plugin being in ${ZSH_CUSTOM}/yourPluginName will make your plugin not work with anything but oh-my-zsh. The ZSH Plugin Standard has sample code to make it easy to find your plugin's home directory in a cross-framework way and won't break when a user inevitably renames your plugin directory.

  4. Don't assume your plugin will be checked out into a directory with the same name you gave the plugin. This is another case where $(dirname ${0}) will work and ${ZSH_CUSTOM}/hardcoded-directory-name will fail miserably.

  5. Use yourplugin.plugin.zsh for the main plugin file. This is what oh-my-zsh looks for. Antigen, zgenom and most other ZSH frameworks will also automatically find and load that filename.

  6. If youre making a theme, include a screenshot so prospective users can see what it looks like without having to install it. If it relies on Powerline-compatible fonts or Nerdfonts, put that in the readme.

  7. If your plugin adds any of its subdirectories to the user's fpath, make sure those subdirectories only contain function definition files. This allows for frameworks to correctly zcompile all functions. Please don't make your plugin add its root directory to the fpath - this will cause problems with zcompile.

  8. If your plugin adds aliases or functions that rely on a given program to be installed, check for the program and only add them when it's present. Same if it only works on one OS - check for the OS first. Example:

function has_command() {
  which "$@" > /dev/null 2>&1
}
if has_command pbcopy; then
   # On macOS, make ^Y yank the selection to the system clipboard. On Linux you can alias pbcopy to `xclip -selection clipboard` or corresponding tool.
   fzf_default_opts+=("--bind 'ctrl-y:execute-silent(echo {+} | pbcopy)'")
fi
  1. Leave ZSH settings alone.

    • If you're using setopt to override the user's existing settings, you will break someone's workflow. If you feel you absolutely must tweak setopt settings, make sure there's an easy way to disable your overrides - consider looking for a file named ~/.YOURPLUGIN_disable_SETTINGSNAME.
    • If you're touching the magic ZSH settings variables like HISTSIZE, only do it if the variable is unset. Wrap it in a if [[ -z "$VARNAME" ]]; then block so you don't step on a user's existing settings.
  2. Don't forget to add a license. A lot of people won't use anything that doesn't have a license. choosealicense.com is a good tool to help you pick one if you don't already have something specific in mind.

  3. Look at the ZSH Plugin Standard. It has a lot of good suggestions.

  4. Submit a PR or add an issue here at awesome-zsh-plugins so your plugin is easy for users to find :-)