

What I realized in my search and multiple trials was there just wasn’t a good Windows terminal emulator. Not gonna cut it for me (though I still do use Cmder regularly for when I need to run Windows cmd.exe) Linux Terminal Emulators

I could never get mouse mode to work (scrolling or selecting panes), and resizing windows was problematic. Unfortunately, when I started using Tmux it became a problem. The closest I got, and one that I used for a while was Cmder: Love this app for managing remote connections (e.g. Pros: Screenshots online made it look pretty.Same as Wsltty, just harder to configure initially.Pros: Window resizing and mouse worked great.Same as Cmder - not as pretty though by default.Cons: Lacked mouse support in Tmux resizing Windows was funky.Each had their own drawbacks and I eventually gave up. I think I tried every major Windows terminal app I could find. Working mouse support for scrolling and Vim/Tmux.I wanted to utilize WSL (not Cygwin) and at a minimum needed: I really just wanted the equivalent of iTerm2 in Windows. In this post, I’m going to quickly explain how I got it running and configured, and some of the other options I tried. It supports tabs, splits, mouse mode and has a pretty color scheme to boot: But the only thing holding me back was the lack of a nice terminal emulator (admittedly, I’m shallow and like pretty things).Īfter much tinkering, I’ve ended up with what I feel is the most comfortable terminal experience I can get on Windows. With the Windows Subystem for Linux (WSL) it’s now possible to have a “native” Ubuntu command line on my Windows 10 machine to use for my CLI nerdiness.
#WGET EQUIVALENT WINDOWS FOR MAC#
I often feel like I just pay the premium for Mac hardware to have a reliable and easy to configure *Nix operating system.īut lately I’ve really been wanting to get off the Mac ecosystem and start using Windows 10 on my X1 Carbon as my daily machine. And using iTerm2 with oh-my-zsh is the best terminal experience I’ve ever had. Python and Node dev environments just work. With Homebrew, command line tools just work. While there’s nothing particularly special about MacOS that I love (in fact there’s quite a bit I don’t like), it’s honestly been the terminal and the underlying Unix based operating system that keep me glued to it.
#WGET EQUIVALENT WINDOWS DRIVER#
I’ve been using a Mac as my daily driver for work for the last few years.
