One feature I miss is profiles, but you can always have multiple config files (author. (The default selection is Home directory. esaruoho at 9:32 Show 5 more comments 87 It isn't the most obvious workflow. Save that to a textfile, copy it to the other computer's /Library/Application Support/iTerm2/DynamicProfiles. Share Improve this answer Follow answered at 20:47 Allan 91. Go to Preferences->Profiles and click on 'Other Actions' and click on 'Copy All Profiles as JSON'. A Preferences pane will appear and under the General tab, look for the Profile Name selection box. In the Preferences window, switch to Profiles tab and under Working Directory select Advanced Configuration. The easiest way to do this is to right click on anywhere on the open iTerm2 window, select Edit Session. I find this extremley useful when I have 4+ panes open in a working state, I don't want to close them but I need to reload my bash profile because of some new changes, so I simply hit "Cmd + Shift + I", type " source ~/.bash_profile", hit "Return" and I'm done. My current picks for my favorite Linux iTerm2 replacements are. Open iTerm2 preferences by using the keyboard shortcut, Command +, or by invoking the command iTerm2 Preferences. You will recieve a small notification about sending input to all panes, the next text you type will physically begin typing into all open panes for your current tab and is executed once you hit " ⏎ Return". If you find the need to enter the same commands into multiple panes at the same time, simply hit " ⌘Command + ⇧Shift + I". It's highly popular due to allowing advanced features such as tabs, split panes, simpler theming and custom keyboard bindings. import iterm2 async def main (connection): allprofiles await (connection) for profile in allprofiles: if profile.name 'Projects': await profile. Share Improve this answer Follow answered at 20:47 Allan 90. ITerm 2 is a replacement application for the default terminal on OSX. 1) Open iTerm echo SHELL /bin/bash ps -p PID TTY TIME CMD 19626 ttys000 0:00.52 /usr/local/bin/zsh 2) Run tmux tmux echo SHELL /usr/local/bin/zsh Configuration: iTerm Profiles > General > Command: /usr/local/bin/zsh In. The easiest way to do this is to right click on anywhere on the open iTerm2 window, select Edit Session. In the absense of having any time/thing to write about in the last months, here's another quick tip. Published on Monday 25th of February, 2013
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