Dotfiles for Vim and Neovim, i3, Fontconfig, etc. pp. Bash functions and aliases, scripts, keybindings, more scripts, …. Est. 2013.
I primarily use these dotfiles on Arch Linux, but most of what's in here also works on Ubuntu and other Linux distributions. Some of it even works on Windows or macOS.
- There's a short guide on Fontconfig and a short guide on X resources in here.
- I have a couple of relevant videos on YouTube:
- Installation uses GNU Make. The configuration for individual programs can be installed without any extraneous changes being made.
There are three main directories: home, root, and misc.
- The
homedirectory contains files that should be linked to from$HOMEand mirrors its directory structure. - The
rootdirectory contains files that should be linked to from outside$HOME. Paths reflect where symlinks should be created relative to the filesystem root directory. - The
miscdirectory contains files that don't require linking.
For example, home/vim/vimrc would be the target of a link at
~/.vim/vimrc and
root/usr/local/share/cows/dynamic-duo.cow
should be linked to from /usr/local/share/cows/dynamic-duo.cow.
Don't proceed unless you are me. If you are, clone this repository to ~/dotfiles:
git clone https://github.com/meribold/dotfiles.git ~/dotfiles
Initialize and clone submodules:
git submodule update --init --jobs 32
Install the configuration for programs you're interested in by giving Make their names. The makefile generally doesn't replace conflicting files; move or remove them manually. For example:
mv ~/.vim ~/.vim.backup
make vim
The currently implemented targets are: vim, nvim, git, bash, screen, xterm,
gpg, crontab, fortunes, irssi, and readline.
Make may consider targets to be up to date because of existing files that conflict with
the links it should create. The -B flag (e.g. make -B vim) forces remaking of all
considered targets. This only results in the removal of conflicting symlinks, but not
regular files.
Use the -n flag (e.g. make -n vim) to preview the commands Make would execute.
