![]() You will have to fix some paths and provide icons yourself. Feel free to use and modify it as you like. ![]() Here is my settings.json provided for inspiration. Nowadays most of this profile stuff can simply be configured using the built-in windows terminal settings GUI but you also have the option to edit the JSON-configuration file directly or copy it to a new machine for faster setup. You can also set a whole bunch of other parameters like transparency, starting directory and behaviour of the tab title. That means you can provide visual clues like Icons, Fonts and Color Schemes to instantly visually recognize what shell you are in (or what shell hides behind which tab). One great thing in Windows Terminal is that you can provide different profiles for all of the shells you want to use in it. See this video of a small ASCII-art code golf written in Julia and executed in a Windows Terminal PowerShell: The really curious may try running the code in the standard CMD-Terminal or the built-in PowerShell-Terminal…īut now on to some more productive tipps for getting more out of the already great Windows Terminal. Finally we get a well performing and capable terminal program that not only supports our beloved tabs and Unicode/UTF-8 but also a whole bunch of shells: CMD, PowerShell, WSL and even Git Bash. As mentioned in my earlier post about hidden gems in the Windows 10 eco system a very welcomed addition is Windows Terminal.
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