Bash Profile Settings 1
Color Prompt for Bash [2017-04-14][20:52:25] [myusername@mypcname:~] $ Modify .bash_profile, .profile, or .bashrc (if using bash) $ cat .bash_profile ##### modify standard command prompt # \n = new line; \u = current username; \w = current working dir (home = ~) ##### Colors # Black 0;30 Dark Gray 1;30 # Blue 0;34 Light Blue 1;34 # Green 0;32 Light Green 1;32 # Cyan 0;36 Light Cyan 1;36 # Red 0;31 Light Red 1;31 # Purple 0;35 Light Purple 1;35 # Brown 0;33 Yellow 1;33 # Light Gray 0;37 White 1;37 export PS1="\[\033[0;35m\][$(date +%H:%M)]\[\033[0;36m\] [\u\[\033[0;37m\]@\[\033[0;36m\]\h:\[\033[0;32m\]\w]\[\033[0m\] \n$ " # or # export PS1="\[\033[0;33m\][\D{%Y-%m-%d}][\t]\[\033[0;36m\] [\u\[\033[0;37m\]@\[\033[0;36m\]\h:\[\033[0;32m\]\w]\[\033[0m\] \n$ " ##### Modify default ls command # -G colorizes output # -h makes sizes human readable # -F throws a / after a directory, * after an executable, and a @ after a symlink # -l listing format (as opposed to default wide) # -a shows all files (even hidden) alias ls='ls -laGFh' ##### add ~/scripts/wicked to the path export PATH="$PATH:$HOME/scripts/wicked"