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gurhush
Long time nixers
Well, what shells do you guys use or prefer? Bash, ash, dash, csh, zsh?

Why do you prefer this shell over others?

Personally, I use zsh with oh-my-zsh. Maximum rice, maximum functionality.
yrmt
Grey Hair Nixers
I like zsh as well.
matt
Members
I have been using bash for many years, but for the past 2 weeks I've been using zsh, and its freakin' awesome. I particularly like the auto-capitalization and auto-complete features.
gholen
Members
I'm still stuck in bash, mainly becuse of thats what I'm used to. I like zsh tough, and read a lot about it, so I can learn more. Overall, bash is good, zsh is better, but I'm used to bash :)

MOD EDIT: It's zsh :p
Phyrne
Long time nixers
I'm a recent adopter of zsh, came from bash. I'm yet to explore its plethora of capabilities, but I'm liking the little things so far; better tab-completion (who the hell coined the term 'globbing') & the right prompt.
crshd
Registered
ZSH here as well. Incredible tab-completion, ksh-style globbing, VCS info in prompt, global aliases... and a little touch of rice with syntax highlighting. There's just so many things that make me love it. Always the first thing I install on a new system. With any other shell, I always feel somewhat crippled.

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Version: 3.1
GCA/IT d-(---)@ s+: a-- C+++(++++)$ UBL*+++ P+++>++++ L++ E W+++$ !N !o K !w !O M+>++ !V PS+++ PE !Y PGP+ !t-- !5 !X R@ tv- b+ DI D+ G e h r++ y+
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Shiru
Members
Bash, since it's what I'm used to. But I'm going to try out ZSH, it sounds impressive reading these posts.
gurhush
Long time nixers
(30-08-2012, 04:30 PM)Shiru Wrote: Bash, since it's what I'm used to. But I'm going to try out ZSH, it sounds impressive reading these posts.

If you don't want to configure zsh manually at first, and you want nice templates and easily configurable addons, a more ricey prompt, etc, try oh-my-zsh after you've installed zsh, changed shell with chsh, and logged out and back in. All you need to do is enter the following command:

Code:
wget --no-check-certificate https://github.com/robbyrussell/oh-my-zsh/raw/master/tools/install.sh -O - | sh

Here is the github page.
Saos
Long time nixers
Zsh from bash. Used bash simply because it was the default for the Linux distros I used, but then FreeBSD started with sh, and I hated it, so I tried zsh. I'll never go back.
Jayro
Long time nixers
Don't hate, but I prefer bash. I have never had any reason not to use it.
deadgone
Long time nixers
I prefer zsh. But I use bash for scripting.

also

Quote:zsh master race, reporting in.
yrmt
Grey Hair Nixers
zsh scripts are way better than bash scripts. give it a try.
xyzodiac
Members
Zsh all the damn way, though the new fish shell seems pretty nifty.
venam
Administrators
I am also using ZSH, one more point for ZSH.Yey! : 3
gurhush
Long time nixers
(05-09-2012, 09:20 PM)NeoTerra Wrote: This thread needs a poll.

Make it with your admin powers, then. I didn't make a poll because there are numerous shells.
crshd
Registered
I think a poll isn't needed. Looking at the responses in this thread, it would only need one option, anyways. :D

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Version: 3.1
GCA/IT d-(---)@ s+: a-- C+++(++++)$ UBL*+++ P+++>++++ L++ E W+++$ !N !o K !w !O M+>++ !V PS+++ PE !Y PGP+ !t-- !5 !X R@ tv- b+ DI D+ G e h r++ y+
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yrmt
Grey Hair Nixers
True. Zsh is obviously master race.
Mafia
Long time nixers
Zsh, by far my favorite so far.
CrossFold
Long time nixers
Zsh :D Because it's simply superb ...
pranomostro
Long time nixers
I am not using zsh, instead I divide between shell scripting in rc and interactive usage of fish.

I like rc for these reasons:
-it's small-I used to do a lot of sh scripting and learned all of rc in two hours
-it's not backwards-compatible-I like it if people are brave enough to throw old ideas away and learn from the earlier design mistakes
-one big advantage is the way shell quoting is implemented. When I look at this page (http://mywiki.wooledge.org/BashPitfalls) most of the issues are quoting errors. Rc has very simple quoting rules and avoids this kind of errors in a very elegant way
the quoting rules are:
text is quoted in single quotes 'abc'. if you want to quote single quotes, you write a double quote, so '''abc''' expands to 'abc'. Variables are expanded into their whole content and treated as one single string, so
a='this file'
rm $a
does not remove this and file, but 'this file'. To save multiple variables, you use a list:
a=('this file' 'that file')
touch $a
creates 'this file' and 'that file'.

Fish on the other hand is like a zsh with less/no configuration and also a non-standard syntax. It has syntax-highlighting and quite good tab completion.
greduan
Long time nixers
No mksh really? Guys gotta pick up the slack sheesh. I use ksh/mksh exclusively nowadays. Faster than bash (or dash for that matter I think), 100% POSIX compliant and nothing more. Minimalistic as fuck.
Eduan / greduan
https://greduan.com
me@greduan.com
z3bra
Grey Hair Nixers
mksh is totally not faster than dash :) Still, it's a good shell, though vi editing mode sucks hairy balls
pranomostro
Long time nixers
I am too lazy to look for mksh, but I might try it now.
ninjacharlie
Members
mksh. Lighter weight than anything else, while retaining the important features of bash.

Plus, it keeps me honest when writing shell scripts (it's POSIX compliant) so I don't use any bash specific features.
cjm
Long time nixers
mksh for all the same reasons as above :-P
I guess I should look into mksh...
henriqueleng
Members
Using ksh, the default OpenBSD one, but write only POSIX shell scripts.
skrzyp
Members
mksh too, but I want to give zsh a try.

But with only one rule - I don't want to use predefined zsh configs, like oh-my-zsh or some other shit like that. I want to write my zsh config from scratch. Is there anything that should I know before doing this?
Code:
AGE = $12
lda #$00
sta AGE
life:
    jsr wait_year
    inc AGE
    cmp #$64
    bne life
jsr dead
xero
Long time nixers
long time zsh user sounding off!

(09-09-2015, 12:09 PM)skrzyp Wrote: mksh too, but I want to give zsh a try.

But with only one rule - I don't want to use predefined zsh configs, like oh-my-zsh or some other shit like that. I want to write my zsh config from scratch. Is there anything that should I know before doing this?

i agree using out of the box configs like oh-my-zsh and prezto don't help you learn anything. but looking at how they're setup sure can. users have spent a lot of time hacking together a feature, like say command syntax highlighting, you might want this feature or not. but looking at how it's achieved is a great learning exp. another important thing to note is the completion and correction engines. they have A LOT of options, and way you are prompted with suggestions (or not) and how flexible the corrections are, need to be tweaked to your liking. make sure you run and go though
Code:
zsh-newuser-install
or
Code:
autoload -Uz zsh-newuser-install; zsh-newuser-install -f
before creating a custom zshrc. since this command will edit/destroy it. my first few times, i tried a bunch of options to decide which i actually liked. this part is extremely important and often overlooked by new users.

i also suggest you have a look at other zsh setups and copy some things you like, and try out new ideas.
mine are here: http://git.io/.zsh
here's a pretty nice blog post: http://zanshin.net/2013/02/02/zsh-config...ground-up/
and here's a repo with lots of additional app completions: https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh-complet...master/src
Code:
man zshoptions
is an important read as well.

the arch + gentoo wikis have pretty awesome overviews of zshell as well:

- https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Zsh
- https://wiki.gentoo.org/wiki/Zsh/Guide
Pr0Wolf29
Members
I just use bash. Gf says "ksh" is best. Never used anything else yet.