

Here are some aliases I like: # Shorten things alias. For Bash, ZSH, and fish it is alias short='long'įor bash, you insert them in ~/.bashrc, for ZSH in ~/.zshrc. The syntax may vary, depending on your shell. For example, if you are in /home/user/foo/bar, you want to get to /home/user/foo. The most common example is changing a directory to go one level up. To do so, you create an alias for a command - a shorter version of the original command. "guid" : ".A core part of making the terminal awesome is making common commands short. Choose a wallpaper of your choice and click Open. Click Browse under the Background section. Only a single pane shows the background image. (see screenshot below) 4 Under Launch size in the right pane, select or enter the Columns (width) and Rows (height) size you want. (see screenshot below) 3 Click/tap on Startup in the left pane. 2 Click/tap on the down arrow button on the top bar, and click/tap on Settings Ctrl +, (comma). Terminal to open with both background images shown. Here's How: 1 Open the Windows Terminal app. Click the dropdown menu on the title bar. Set up a profile to have a background image Close all terminals Open the terminal via wt split-pane, or wt -p 'Command Prompt' split-pane -p 'Windows PowerShell' Expected behavior. "backgroundImage": "ms-appdata:///roaming/640.jpg", Follow these steps to set the background image in Windows Terminal. "backgroundImage" : "ms-appdata:///roaming/yourimage.jpg", I'm not sure if I'm missing something obvious or if anyone has come across this issue before? Microsoft guidances says to add the below into the profiles.json file, however after doing this the terminal cannot load the file and defaults back to the default settings. It looks really cool but I can't seem to set a custom image as the background. I've just been having a look at the new windows terminal preview from the Microsoft Store.
