I forked and modified this from Dan Schultz, who in turn started from Zach Holman's.
Everything's built around topic areas. If you're adding a new area to your forked dotfiles — say,
"Java" — you can simply add a java directory and put files in there. Anything with an extension
of .zsh will get automatically included into your shell. Anything with an extension of .symlink
will get symlinked without extension into $HOME when you run script/bootstrap.
There's a few special files in the hierarchy.
- bin/: Anything in
bin/will get added to your$PATHand be made available everywhere. - Brewfile: This is a list of applications for Homebrew to install things like Chrome and 1Password and stuff. Edit this file before running any initial setup.
- topic/*.zsh: Any files ending in
.zshget loaded into your environment. - topic/path.zsh: Any file named
path.zshis loaded first and is expected to setup$PATHor similar. - topic/completion.zsh: Any file named
completion.zshis loaded last and is expected to setup autocomplete. - topic/install.sh: Any file named
install.shis executed when you runscript/install. To avoid being loaded automatically, its extension is.sh, not.zsh. - topic/*.symlink: Any file ending in
*.symlinkgets symlinked into your$HOME. This is so you can keep all of those versioned in your dotfiles but still keep those autoloaded files in your home directory. These get symlinked in when you runscript/bootstrap.
Run this:
git clone https://github.com/reefdog/dotfiles.git ~/.dotfiles
cd ~/.dotfiles
./bootstrapThis will symlink the appropriate files in .dotfiles to your home directory. Everything is
configured and tweaked within ~/.dotfiles.
The main file you'll want to change right off the bat is zsh/zshrc.symlink, which sets up a few
paths that'll be different on your particular machine.