![]() I've been using Witch for years, which I always thought was really good, but this is immediately better in several ways. I use it to put 2 windows side-by-side, or to maximize a window.Wow! This is superb, and nearly perfect already. ShiftIt is a tool that allows you to manage the size and position of your windows through keyboard shortcuts. It does other things but this is all I am using it for. HyperSwitch allows you to remap Alt+Tab (or another shortcut) to cycle between your windows. On a Mac, on the contrary, you switch between applications with Command+Tab, and another shortcut to switch between windows of the same application. I used Microsoft Windows for a very long time, and Alt+Tab allows you to cycle between your windows. Yes, my screen turns yellow-ish at night and I love it! f.luxį.lux is a small utility that changes the color scheme of your screen throughout the day so that it never looks too bright (and especially too blue at night). I also recommend using Homebrew Cask to be able to install applications that have installers. Want to install Maven? Just run brew install maven! Almost everything I install on my Mac comes through Homebrew. The colors allow me to easily spot the information of the prompt, and also to see where commands where typed (it is hard to distinguish commands from results if your terminal displays all the text in one color). Git information, to know what branch I am in, and to know if there are non-committed changes (displays a red ‘*’). ![]() the full path to the current directory, so that I know where commands are executed, and so that I can easily copy/paste the path.the user and hostname, so that I know where this console is running, which is useful when I log in on EC2 instances.the time, so that I can go back and see when I typed a command, and also to have an estimate of how long a command took to execute.My prompt is largely customized to display the following information: It has plugins, such as a Git plugin to display information about the current Git repository in your prompt. Oh My Zsh is a tool to manage your Zsh configuration. ![]() It allows you to split your windows, it has better text editing features, and lots of options. ![]() ITerm2 is a great replacement for Terminal. With SourceTree, you will never commit something unwanted. This allows you to precisely select what you are committing, and what you are leaving behind. What I absolutely love with SourceTree is the ability to stage hunks of code (this can even be a single line). All I need is in there: support for the programming languages I use (Kotlin/Scala/Java), support for the build tools I use (Gradle/Maven/SBT). Many people use the Ultimate Edition (paid version) but I use the Community Edition. I am a Kotlin/Scala/Java developer, and IntelliJ IDEA is just the best IDE on the market for these languages. ![]() And no, it has nothing to do with the Visual Studio IDE. Lots of plugins are available, updates are frequent (unlike Sublime…), and it is fast (unlike Atom). VS Code is great text editor, and it does much more (markdown preview, including images Javascript debugger, etc.). I was a great fan of Sublime Text… until Visual Studio Code came out. In this post, I thought I would share what are “my essentials” when I use my Mac… Visual Studio Code This goes through the choice of tools that I use, and how I configure them. I am a Software Engineer and I like when the tools I use help me through my day of work, not when they make it complicated. ![]()
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