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dots

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Commits

List of commits on branch main.
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850ab4bde6354ec72633e9f77a15963ad6313b71

Disable safety statements for now

jjohnmichel committed 2 years ago
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e96c45dd70c8fd53c68643bf383d18be18bf8b09

Improve script safety and add some more brew formulae

jjohnmichel committed 2 years ago
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e3ea149341bf497fad839744a6521d123d3c717a

Remove unused bash completion

jjohnmichel committed 4 years ago
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e80370ebf3b700efdcb9cfc0a258dc61e48e2b1f

Remove Homebrew versions tap and install options

jjohnmichel committed 4 years ago
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aef1a61a94b5d7ae3962bb1bd72ebe455c6b3632

Update just about everything

jjohnmichel committed 4 years ago
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811e3e3e80990328e4d37c0e020abf8d9e8abd1c

Push referenced tags along with commits

jjohnmichel committed 8 years ago

README

The README file for this repository.

John Michel's dots

This has been heavily derived from Mathias' dotfiles, with some additional customization from Dan Herbert's old dotfiles. The name comes from Stephen Tudor's dots.

Installation

Using Git and the bootstrap script

You can clone the repository wherever you want. (I like to keep it in ~/Projects/dots, with ~/dots as a symlink.) The bootstrap script will pull in the latest version and copy the files to your home folder.

git clone https://github.com/johnmichel/dots.git && cd dots && source bootstrap.sh

To update, cd into your local dots repository and then:

source bootstrap.sh

Alternatively, to update while avoiding the confirmation prompt:

set -- -f; source bootstrap.sh

Git-free install

To install these dotfiles without Git:

cd && curl -#L https://github.com/johnmichel/dots/tarball/main | tar -xzv --strip-components 1 --exclude={README.md,bootstrap.sh,LICENSE}

To update later on, just run that command again.

Specify the $PATH

If ~/.path exists, it will be sourced along with the other files, before any feature testing (such as detecting which version of ls is being used) takes place.

Here’s an example ~/.path file that adds ~/utils to the $PATH:

export PATH="$HOME/utils:$PATH"

Add custom commands without creating a new fork

If ~/.extra exists, it will be sourced along with the other files. You can use this to add a few custom commands without the need to fork this entire repository, or to add commands you don’t want to commit to a public repository.

Your ~/.extra could look something like this:

# Git credentials
GIT_AUTHOR_NAME="Your Name"
GIT_COMMITTER_NAME="$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME"
git config --global user.name "$GIT_AUTHOR_NAME"
GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL="yourname@users.noreply.github.com"
GIT_COMMITTER_EMAIL="$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL"
git config --global user.email "$GIT_AUTHOR_EMAIL"

You could also use ~/.extra to override settings, functions and aliases from my dots repository. It’s probably better to fork this repository instead, though.

Sensible OS X defaults

When setting up a new Mac, you may want to set some sensible OS X defaults:

chmod +x .macos
./.macos

Install Homebrew formulae

When setting up a new Mac, you may want to install some common Homebrew formulae (after [installing Homebrew=(https://brew.sh/#install), of course):

chmod +x brew.sh
./brew.sh