#shell-prompt #prompt #shell #pwd

app pwds

print the path of the current working directory, shortly

2 unstable releases

Uses old Rust 2015

0.2.0 Oct 31, 2016
0.1.0 Jul 27, 2016

#3 in #pwd

26 downloads per month

Apache-2.0

7KB
50 lines

pwds

Version Build Status License Downloads

Print the path of the current working directory, shortly.

The current working directory in your prompt can get uncomfortably large, leaving little space to type your own commands. With pwds paths like /home/user/Code/rust/src/doc/nomicon are displayed as ~/C/r/s/d/nomicon.

It shows the first two characters for (hidden) directories that start with a ".". So /home/rahiel/.config/autostart becomes ~/.c/autostart.

Installation

Install pwds with cargo:

cargo install pwds

Then you need to customize your PS1 in your shell's initialization file, e.g. .bashrc. Here is a standard prompt, the \w is an escape code for the current working directory:

PS1='\[\033[01;32m\]\u@\h\[\033[00m\]:\[\033[01;34m\]\w\[\033[00m\]\$ '

replace \w with $(pwds):

PS1='\[\033[01;32m\]\u@\h\[\033[00m\]:\[\033[01;34m\]$(pwds)\[\033[00m\]\$ '

and enjoy a smaller prompt!

Customization

By default, paths with more than 16 characters are shortened by replacing directory names with their first character. This can be configured by setting the PWDS_LENGTH environment variable:

export PWDS_LENGTH=10

The current (most right) directory is never shortened.

References

I encountered the concept of pwds in fish and more recently in xonsh, two modern and user-friendly shells. I'd use xonsh but a few issues keep me from switching. In the meantime I'm trying to improve the experience of the Bash shell, with as one of the results this program.

No runtime deps