DEV Community

Cover image for Put colour to your terminal prompt
sespinoza
sespinoza

Posted on

Put colour to your terminal prompt

If you live in the terminal, you may as well be comfortable in it.

In this article you will learn:

  • How to set colours to your prompt terminal.
  • How to show the current git branch.

What you'll get:

terminal

One of the things that I really wanted was to have a customized terminal, there are a handful of shells out there, one of the most popular begin zhs popularized by oh my zsh. For some, these are great tools, but for me, that I only want to have some colour and display the git branch... It felt like hitting a tiny nail with Thor's hammer. I knew this could be achieved just by using bash, so I did some digging, here is how to achieve it.

Where is the prompt?

Like many things in bash, everything is inside a configuration variable, in this case, the prompt is stored in the PS1 variable, check it out:

$ echo $PS1
${debian_chroot:+($debian_chroot)}\u@\h:\w\$
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

The most simplistic structure of the above is the following:

\u@\h:\w\$
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • \u : username
  • @ : at symbol
  • \h : hostname
  • W : working directory
  • $ : # sign if is root or $ sign if normal user.

We can change this variable however we want. Let's say that we only want to have the working directory in the prompt, we could do that like this:

export PS1="\w\$ "
~/
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

As it happens, this change won't be permanent, if you open a new terminal you'll see that it's just like when you started.

Now that we have the bones, lets put some colour, shall we?

Colours and styles

The way a terminal access colour and style is by using sequences like \e[92m for light_green, for example. We could print something with echo -e "\e[92m This text is green".

terminal

The -e option in echo it just "enable interpretation of backslash escapes" (man page).

Let's look a bit closer to this sequence: \e[92m. This is composed of the Escape character which can be accessed with \e, \033 or \x1B, then a [ the format code (92) and m.

Here are just a few colours you can choose from:

  • \e[0m: Reset, removes styles and colours.
  • \e[30m: Black
  • \e[31m: Red.
  • \e[32m: Green.
  • \e[33m: Yellow.
  • \e[34m: Blue.
  • \e[35m: Magenta.
  • \e[36m: Cyan.

So now we could use these in combination with the previous section to have styled our prompt. Let's make the user and host blue.

export PS1="\e[34m\u@\h\e[0m:\w\$"
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

terminal

The .bashrc configuration file

Alright, now that you know how things work, we can make this our permanent configuration. To do this, we have to write to the ~/.bashrc configuration file.

Open the file with your favourite editor (vim of course...) and paste the following:

bold="\e[1m"
light_green="\e[92m"
blue="\e[34m"
yellow="\e[33m"
reset_formating="\e[0m"
get_branch() {
   git symbolic-ref --short HEAD 2>/dev/null
}
export PS1="\[${bold}${light_green}\]\u@\h \[${blue}\]\W\[${yellow}\] [\$(get_branch)]\[${reset_formating}\]\$ "
Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

At this point is pretty clear what we are doing here, so let's go through it: In the first lines, we are just declaring string variables. Then we defined get_branch which is a function that will execute every time you change from one directory to another and extract the current git branch of that project.

Note: \[ and \] don't affect here, just keep the blocks organized.

Note: "In bash, this is how we access the value of the variable: ${variable_name}"

And that's it! if you run source .bashrc or you open a new terminal, you will see your changes. Try to test it by cd to a directory that has a git repository.

I hope this was helpful to you. If you find it useful or if you find an issue, just send me a quick email and I'll respond to you as soon as possible.

All the best!

References

Originally published in my personal web page:

https://sespinoza.me/#/articles/5fbc6e4d9a9e50c1b04d09ab

About me

Iā€™m a Software Engineer, writer, tech enthusiast, pianist, origami lover, amateur photographer. In my spare time, I go trekking, play the piano and learn history.

My tech: JavaScript, Node.js, React, Ruby, Crystal, Bash, Docker.

You can follow me on Twitter, LinkedIn or visit my page to contact me.

Top comments (0)