![]() ![]() By default, the Terminal will keep the window open and display the text "," leaving you with a nonfunctional window that you have to close manually. One way you can better manage these windows is to change the default Terminal behavior for when a terminal shell exits. ![]() While an unused Terminal window can quickly be closed by pressing Command-W or clicking the red button at the top of the window, if you run numerous scripts then you may be left with a number of windows to close. As I was writing this post I figured out how to use tabs on iTerm2, so I'll ask an amended question #2: can iTerm2 or a similar program be setup to allow you to select different shells to run in different tabs? I want to install PowerShell, I'm assuming you can install the git cli on Mac, and there may be others I want, and it would be very nice to have them all work from the same terminal program, especially so I could set up default profiles and fonts and such.If you regularly script tasks in the Terminal, you might find at times that handling windows can be a burden. Has anyone created a way to set up bash or zsh to have the modern, transparency-oriented look of Windows Terminal? I promise I googled this already, every result seems to be about making Windows Terminal look like bash, not the other way around. But, even on MacOS, bash is still bash, even if I'm running it with iTerm2. But beyond looking nice, one of its best features is its tabs, which allow you to open up a new tab of, say, Powershell, or another cmd prompt, or even a bash shell if you're running wsl.īut now I'm re-acquainting myself with MacOS and of course, 99% of it does look and feel better than Windows. I did however become accustomed in the desert to the beautiful new Windows Terminal, which can look quite nice if you set it up right. After ~5 years in the desert I'm finally back to Mac with my new M1 Macbook Pro. ![]()
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