For the most part this exists to prevent Chromium from opening anything ever on any system it happens to be installed on. I will always prefer vim, firefox, and feh for any mimetype those can open. Unfortunately Arch's default mimetype dataset prefers Chromium for a vast array of types if it's installed. |
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.config | ||
.iTerm2 | ||
.terminfo/a | ||
.vim | ||
.gitconfig | ||
.mostrc | ||
.p10k.zsh | ||
.taskrc | ||
.tmux.conf | ||
.vimrc | ||
.xinitrc | ||
.Xresources | ||
.zshrc | ||
README.md | ||
setup_dotfiles.py |
dotfiles
Personal dotfiles; probably not much here of value for anyone not me.
In essence this repo will mimic the layout of my homedir with a bunch of dotfiles and utility scripts in the right locations as if this were my homedirectory.
The setup_dotfiles.py script takes the contents of this path and creates symlinks in my actual homedir, matching the directory structure.
Requirements
- Python 3.4
- A home directory
Setup
- Clone the repo
python3 setup_dotfiles.py
You can run the setup script from any path and it'll figure out what to do. The script will create symlinks in your home directory matching its layout. If you want to create the tree in a different location, you'll need to open the interpreter and manually invoke install_dotfiles()
with the correct arguments.
You shouldn't do this if you're not me though because this will clobber your environment and replace it with mine. :)