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@reinvanoyen
Last active December 9, 2024 22:38
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Add Git Branch Name to Terminal Prompt (MacOS zsh)

Add Git Branch Name to Terminal Prompt (zsh)

Updated for MacOS with zsh

  • Catalina
  • Big Sur
  • Monterey
  • Ventura
  • Sonoma

screenshot

Install

Open ~/.zshrc in your favorite editor and add the following content to the bottom.

function parse_git_branch() {
    git branch 2> /dev/null | sed -n -e 's/^\* \(.*\)/[\1]/p'
}

COLOR_DEF=$'%f'
COLOR_USR=$'%F{243}'
COLOR_DIR=$'%F{197}'
COLOR_GIT=$'%F{39}'
setopt PROMPT_SUBST
export PROMPT='${COLOR_USR}%n ${COLOR_DIR}%~ ${COLOR_GIT}$(parse_git_branch)${COLOR_DEF} $ '

Reload and apply adjustments

To reload and apply adjustments to the formatting use source ~/.zshrc in the zsh shell.

Credits

@devih-21
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helpful, thanks bro

@vasu2912
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Looks Clean !!!

@csarrvas
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Thanks!! 👍

@pychap
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pychap commented Dec 21, 2023

Thank you!

@z-coder-hub
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Thank you!

@emcfarlane
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Thank you!

@gideonokyere
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Thanks

@TrevorPawlewicz
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This is exactly what I was looking for... thank you!

@beitomartinez
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Simple and exactly what I was looking for... thanks!! 💯

@laptopmutia
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laptopmutia commented Mar 26, 2024

but it adds unneccesary space when I opening the non git folder, could we do something about that?

the syntax to get the branch also could be simpler we could do this now

git branch --show-current

@luisf-av1
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It works great, thanks!

@jftuga
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jftuga commented Jun 14, 2024

I have a two line prompt:

  • line 1: current directory [git branch]
  • line 2: HH:MM:SS $
function parse_git_branch() {
    git branch 2> /dev/null | sed -n -e 's/^\* \(.*\)/[\1]/p'
}
COLOR_DEF=$'%f'
COLOR_DATE=$'%F{243}'
COLOR_DIR=$'%F{197}'
COLOR_GIT=$'%F{39}'
setopt PROMPT_SUBST
PROMPT_CWD='${COLOR_DIR}%~ ${COLOR_GIT}$(parse_git_branch)${COLOR_DEF}'
export NEWLINE=$'\n'
export PROMPT="${NEWLINE}${PROMPT_CWD}${NEWLINE}${COLOR_DATE}%D{%H:%M:%S}${COLOR_DEF} $ "

I don't need USER, so I changed COLOR_USER to COLOR_DATE.

Here is what it looks like, with the directory name in red, the branch in blue, and the date in faded gray:

~/go/src/github.com/jftuga/dtdiff [dev]
17:35:28 $ 

What I like about having the time:

  • If I meant to time something, but forgot to, I have a built-in timer of sorts
  • I can easily scroll back to see how long ago I ran a command

@butachi
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butachi commented Jul 16, 2024

thanks!

@NidorPL
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NidorPL commented Aug 21, 2024

Amazing, thanks !

@Anti-Reverb
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Thank you.

@cowley05
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This is great thanks!

Is there a way to make it change as i move directories/branches?
Scenario 1
I am on branch main the prompt shows my branch as main i switch to branch feature-X the prompt still shows I am on branch main

Scenario 2
Lets say I have 2 repositories repository A and repository B If I am on branch main in repository A and then run cd ../repository B and I am on feature-branch-X in that repository, then the prompt still shows I am on main which is not true. Is there a way to change this?

IDK if this is an issue that just I'm having or if its something I'm doing wrong etc.

@alysedunn
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Looks great. Thanks!

@SaraForesti
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That's great, thank you!
Just one issue: I have to run the source ~/.zshrc (in my case source ~/.zprofile) command each time I open a new terminal tab or window. Is there a way to run this automatically?

@reinvanoyen
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Author

That's great, thank you! Just one issue: I have to run the source ~/.zshrc (in my case source ~/.zprofile) command each time I open a new terminal tab or window. Is there a way to run this automatically?

The ~/. zprofile file is only evaluated when you login to your mac user account. The . zshrc (environment for interactive shells) should be used for parameters like $PROMPT, aliases, functions, options, history variables and bind keymappings you would like to have in both login and interactive shells.

What's preventing you from using the .zshrc file?

@SaraForesti
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That's great, thank you! Just one issue: I have to run the source ~/.zshrc (in my case source ~/.zprofile) command each time I open a new terminal tab or window. Is there a way to run this automatically?

The ~/. zprofile file is only evaluated when you login to your mac user account. The . zshrc (environment for interactive shells) should be used for parameters like $PROMPT, aliases, functions, options, history variables and bind keymappings you would like to have in both login and interactive shells.

What's preventing you from using the .zshrc file?

Thanks for the reply.
When I installed nvm via Homebrew, I got these 3 items created
.zprofile

.zsh_history

.zsh__sessions (folder)
I thought .zshrc would be one of them (It's been a while since last time I've done this for a new machine!), but since it wasn't there, I've done some research and found out that .zshrc and .zprofile should be the same: I guess they are not!

I'll try create a .zshrc manually then.

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