Writing your own prompt ======================= .. only:: builder_man .. warning:: This document uses formatting to show what a prompt would look like. If you are viewing this in the man page, you probably want to switch to looking at the html version instead. Run ``help custom-prompt`` to view it in a web browser. Fish ships a number of prompts that you can view with the :doc:`fish_config ` command, and many users have shared their prompts online. However, you can also write your own, or adjust an existing prompt. This is a good way to get used to fish's :doc:`scripting language `. Unlike other shells, fish's prompt is built by running a function - :doc:`fish_prompt `. Or, more specifically, three functions: - :doc:`fish_prompt `, which is the main prompt function - :doc:`fish_right_prompt `, which is shown on the right side of the terminal. - :doc:`fish_mode_prompt `, which is shown if :ref:`vi-mode ` is used. These functions are run, and whatever they print is displayed as the prompt (minus one trailing newline). Here, we will just be writing a simple fish_prompt. Our first prompt ---------------- Let's look at a very simple example:: function fish_prompt echo $PWD '>' end This prints the current working directory (:envvar:`PWD`) and a ``>`` symbol to show where the prompt ends. The ``>`` is :ref:`quoted ` because otherwise it would signify a :ref:`redirection `. Because we've used :doc:`echo `, it adds spaces between the two so it ends up looking like (assuming ``_`` is your cursor): .. role:: white .. parsed-literal:: :class: highlight :white:`/home/tutorial >`\ _ Formatting ---------- ``echo`` adds spaces between its arguments. If you don't want those, you can use :doc:`string join ` like this:: function fish_prompt string join '' -- $PWD '>' end The ``--`` indicates to ``string`` that no options can come after it, in case we extend this with something that can start with a ``-``. There are other ways to remove the space, including ``echo -s`` and :doc:`printf `. Adding colo(u)r --------------- This prompt is functional, but a bit boring. We could add some color. Fortunately, fish offers the :doc:`set_color ` command, so you can do:: echo (set_color red)foo ``set_color`` can also handle RGB colors like ``set_color 23b455``, and other formatting options including bold and italics. So, taking our previous prompt and adding some color:: function fish_prompt string join '' -- (set_color green) $PWD (set_color normal) '>' end A "normal" color tells the terminal to go back to its normal formatting options. What ``set_color`` does internally is to print an escape sequence that tells the terminal to change color. So if you see something like:: echo \e\[31mfoo that could just be ``set_color red``. Shortening the working directory -------------------------------- This is fine, but our :envvar:`PWD` can be a bit long, and we are typically only interested in the last few directories. We can shorten this with the :doc:`prompt_pwd ` helper that will give us a shortened working directory:: function fish_prompt string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd) (set_color normal) '>' end ``prompt_pwd`` takes options to control how much to shorten. For instance, if we want to display the last two directories, we'd use ``prompt_pwd --full-length-dirs 2``:: function fish_prompt string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd --full-length-dirs 2) (set_color normal) '>' end With a current directory of "/home/tutorial/Music/Lena Raine/Oneknowing", this would print .. role:: green .. parsed-literal:: :class: highlight :green:`~/M/Lena Raine/Oneknowing`>_ Status ------ One important bit of information that every command returns is the :ref:`status `. This is a whole number from 0 to 255, and usually it is used as an error code - 0 if the command returned successfully, or a number from 1 to 255 if not. It's useful to display this in your prompt, but showing it when it's 0 seems kind of wasteful. First of all, since every command (except for :doc:`set `) changes the status, you need to store it for later use as the first thing in your prompt. Use a :ref:`local variable ` so it will be confined to your prompt function:: set -l last_status $status And after that, you can set a string if it not zero:: # Prompt status only if it's not 0 set -l stat if test $last_status -ne 0 set stat (set_color red)"[$last_status]"(set_color normal) end And to print it, we add it to our ``string join``:: string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd) (set_color normal) $stat '>' If ``$last_status`` was 0, ``$stat`` is empty, and so it will simply disappear. So our entire prompt is now:: function fish_prompt set -l last_status $status # Prompt status only if it's not 0 set -l stat if test $last_status -ne 0 set stat (set_color red)"[$last_status]"(set_color normal) end string join '' -- (set_color green) (prompt_pwd) (set_color normal) $stat '>' end And it looks like: .. role:: green .. role:: red .. parsed-literal:: :class: highlight :green:`~/M/L/Oneknowing`\ :red:`[1]`>_ after we run ``false`` (which returns 1). Where to go from here? ---------------------- We have now built a simple but working and usable prompt, but of course more can be done. - Fish offers more helper functions: - ``prompt_login`` to describe the user/hostname/container or ``prompt_hostname`` to describe just the host - ``fish_is_root_user`` to help with changing the symbol for root. - ``fish_vcs_prompt`` to show version control information (or ``fish_git_prompt`` / ``fish_hg_prompt`` / ``fish_svn_prompt`` to limit it to specific systems) - You can add a right prompt by changing :doc:`fish_right_prompt ` or a vi-mode prompt by changing :doc:`fish_mode_prompt `. - Some prompts have interesting or advanced features - Add the time when the prompt was printed - Show various integrations like python's venv - Color the parts differently. You can look at fish's sample prompts for inspiration. Open up :doc:`fish_config `, find one you like and pick it. For example:: fish_config prompt show # <- shows all the sample prompts fish_config prompt choose disco # <- this picks the "disco" prompt for this session funced fish_prompt # <- opens fish_prompt in your editor, and reloads it once the editor exits