========================== Windows Guide ========================== Installation ================ The easy way ---------------- The easiest way to install xonsh on windows is through the `Anaconda Python Distribution `__ and the conda package manager. .. note:: Xonsh is not supported on legacy Python (2.7). Install xonsh with the following command: .. code-block:: bat > conda config --add channels conda-forge > conda install xonsh This will install xonsh and all the recommended dependencies. Next, run xonsh: .. code-block:: bat > xonsh snail@home ~ $ Install from source ------------------- To install xonsh from source on Windows, first install `Python v3.4+`_ from http://python.org. Remember to select "Add python to PATH" during installation. Next, install the prompt_toolkit dependency via ``pip``: .. code-block:: bat > pip install prompt-toolkit Download the latest `xonsh-master.zip`_ from github and unzip it to ``xonsh-master``. Now install xonsh: .. code-block:: bat > cd xonsh-master > python setup.py install Next, run xonsh: .. code-block:: bat > xonsh snail@home ~ $ .. _Python v3.4+: https://www.python.org/downloads/windows/ .. _xonsh-master.zip: https://github.com/xonsh/xonsh/archive/master.zip .. _cmder: http://cmder.net/ .. _conemu: https://conemu.github.io/ Usage ================ Color style -------------------------------- The dark red and blue colors are completely unreadable in Windows' default terminal. .. image:: _static/intensify-colors-on-win-false.png :width: 396 px :alt: intensify-colors-win-false :align: center There are ways to configure the colors (see below), but to give new users the best experience Xonsh has some tricks to fix colors. This is controlled by the :ref:`$INTENSIFY_COLORS_ON_WIN ` environment variable which is ``True`` by default. **On Windows 10** Windows 10 supports true color in the terminal, so on Win 10 Xonsh will use a style with hard coded colors instead of the terminal colors. .. image:: _static/better_colors_windows.png :width: 600 px :alt: better_colors_windows :align: center **On older Windows** On older windows installations Xonsh takes an other approach and replaces some of the unreadable dark colors with more readable alternatives (e.g. blue becomes cyan). **Configure the terminal colors** It is possible to configure the Windows console with readable default colors, but it is tedious to do manually. The Microsoft console team has made a `handy tool to configure colors`_ in the terminal * `Download Colortool`_ from from GitHub With better colors configured, ``$INTENSIFY_COLORS_ON_WIN`` should be set to ``False`` to allow the console to control the colors. You can do this by adding the following to the xonsh run control file ``.xonshrc``: .. code-block:: xonshcon $INTENSIFY_COLORS_ON_WIN = False .. _handy tool to configure colors: https://blogs.msdn.microsoft.com/commandline/2017/08/11/introducing-the-windows-console-colortool/ .. _Download Colortool: https://github.com/Microsoft/console/tree/master/tools/ColorTool Avoid locking the working directory ----------------------------------- Python (like other processes on Windows) locks the current working directory so it can't be deleted or renamed. ``cmd.exe`` has this behaviour as well, but it is quite annoying for a shell. The :ref:`free_cwd ` xontrib (add-on) for xonsh solves some of this problem. It works by hooking the prompt to reset the current working directory to the root drive folder whenever the shell is idle. It only works with the prompt-toolkit back-end. To enable that behaviour run the following: Add this line to your ``~/.xonshrc`` file to have it always enabled. .. code-block:: xonshcon >>> xontrib load free_cwd Name space conflicts -------------------- Due to ambiguity with the Python ``dir`` builtin, to list the current directory via the ``cmd.exe`` builtin you must explicitly request the ``.``, like this: .. code-block:: xonshcon >>> dir . Volume in drive C is Windows Volume Serial Number is 30E8-8B86 Directory of C:\Users\snail\xonsh 2015-05-12 03:04 . 2015-05-12 03:04 .. 2015-05-01 01:31 xonsh 0 File(s) 0 bytes 3 Dir(s) 11,008,000,000 bytes free Many people create a ``d`` alias for the ``dir`` command to save typing and avoid the ambiguity altogether: .. code-block:: xonshcon >>> aliases['d'] = ['cmd', '/c', 'dir'] You can add aliases to your ``~/.xonshrc`` to have it always available when xonsh starts. Unicode support for Windows ---------------------------- Python's utf-8 unicode is not compatible with the default shell 'cmd.exe' on Windows. The package ``win_unicode_console`` fixes this. Xonsh will use ``win_unicode_console`` if it is installed. This can be disabled/enabled with the :ref:`$WIN_UNICODE_CONSOLE ` environment variable. .. note:: Even with unicode support enabled the symbols available will depend on the font used in cmd.exe. The packages ``win_unicode_console`` can be installed along with xonsh by using the package name ``xonsh[win]`` or separately using pip or conda. .. code-block:: bat > pip install win_unicode_console .. code-block:: bat > conda install --channel xonsh win_unicode_console