![]() ![]() Then check iTerm > Preferences > General > Startup > Open default window arrangement and you will get your preferred arrangement every time you open up iTerm2. I also recommend setting your favorite arrangement as a default in iTerm > Preferences > Arrangements > Set Default. Once you’ve got the arrangement you like Window > Save Window Arrangement allows you to save it with a name of your choice so you can access it again later with Window > Restore Window Arrangement. ![]() You can then split either of the resulting panes further. You can set up a pane arrangement by right clicking in the terminal window and selecting either “Split Pane Vertically” or “Split Pane Horizontally”. So when you need more than one terminal windows open you don’t have to fiddle about switching between them. Pane arrangementsīenefit: When you’ve got iTerm2 in fullscreen mode you’ve got plenty of space to see more than one pane at a time. Somehow I find that easier in terms of cognitive load. With these first two tips combined, it’s easier to think of yourself as looking at the same thing in two different ways, rather than looking at two different things. I also have a small amount of blur just to emphasise the focus on iTerm2. Any more transparent than that and I struggle to read what’s written in iTerm2. I have mine about 1/5 the way from opaque to transparent. You can set the transparency of the iTerm2 window in iTerm > Preferences > Profiles > Window > Window Appearance. Making the iTerm2 window a little bit transparent and blurring everything else can solve that problem. Transparency and blurīenefit: When you use the previous tip and switch between fullscreen iTerm2 and everything else it can be a bit cognitively jarring with such an abrupt change. Be careful that it isn’t a command that is used by one of your other applications though. I use Alt + Space, which is super easy to jump your hand to, but you can set it to anything you want. You can set this by going into iTerm > Preferences > Keys > Hotkey. I leave it on fullscreen basically all the time, and switch between iTerm2 and whatever else I’m doing using a system-wide hotkey. This method makes it effortless.Ĭmd + Enter turns iTerm2 fullscreen. You can download iTerm2 for free here: Here are some tips for using and configuring iTerm2… Fullscreen and system-wide show/hideīenefit: It can be fiddly switching between a browser and a terminal, and when you’re developing you do it all the time. However, iTerm2 has a whole load of additional features that can make your workflow a lot smoother, and when you’re developing you spend so much time using the command line that even tiny adjustments to your workflow can add up over the course of a day or a week to a significant improvement. There’s even a fair amount of customisation (colors etc) you can perform to make it suit you better than the default configuration. ![]() Mac OSX comes with the Terminal application, and for most purposes this is perfectly sufficient. If you’re going to use the command line you need a command line interface. ![]()
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