Some home directory dot files to be installed into a new user home directory.
These are some of David Blume's dot files to be installed in new user home directories.
Here's a screen capture showing tmux, vim, and the shell preparing to run entr. (Because tmux+vim+entr is a great IDE.)
My vim config is light weight: no nerd fonts, no statusline plugin, no plugin manager, no file manager, etc. Yet it's full featured in that the status line shows nearly all the info of Powerline, and uses the built-in plugin manager and powers-up netrw, the built-in file explorer. It includes about five essential plugins.
The screen cap shows the tmux status line, the vim status line, taglist, and a vim popup menu.
There are two remote repos:
Run the following:
~$ mkdir dotfiles
~$ cd dotfiles
dotfiles$ curl -L https://git.dlma.com/dotfiles.git/archive/HEAD.tar > dotfiles.tar
dotfiles$ tar -xvf dotfiles.tar
dotfiles$ rm dotfiles.tar
Then, when you run setup.sh
, it'll backup your changed files to backup_of_dotfiles_<date>
and replace them with the ones here. You can perform a dry run to see which files will
be changed by passing the "-n" parameter.
./setup.sh -n
If you approve of the changes, then just run setup.sh
./setup.sh
See config.dlma.com for more.
Vim will work without warnings if you install ctags
and cscope
.
sudo apt update
sudo apt install ctags cscope moreutils
If you're coming from the far future and want the latest modules, not those
pinned to a version, pip install
requirements.in instead of requirements.txt.
sudo apt install python3-pip
python3 -m pip install -r requirements.in
Yes.
This software uses the MIT license.