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Intro

Hi! Welcome to my dotfiles

"dotfile" is a colloquial name for "configuration file". As they're hidden by default (try running ls with and without out the -a flag), they're the perfect place for applications to store configuration data that they don't want users changing on accident.

With this git repo, any machine can feel like home with a simple git pull. (Well, almost. I just need to get these dotfiles into my home directory. Read this for full details).

There are many ways to modify the behavior of a program. Per machine, per user, per instance, etc. Dotfiles are generally per-user.

  1. Hard-code constants
  2. Invoke program with parameters (--options)
  3. Read configuration files (like these!)
  4. Get user input during the program

I try to keep most of my configuration files in the ~/.config/<APP> folder, but older systems will still require you to use something like ~/.*<APP>*.

Fun facts

  • The "dot" makes the file hidden: link. It seems reasonable to have these configuration files hidden, as you only wanna edit them when you wanna edit the system. The idea is: when you're being a regular user, you shouldn't even have to think about them.
  • Referring to them as "hidden files" is too broad. Not all hidden files are config files. Referring to them as "config files" is totally reasonable. However, not all config files go in your home directory.

Many of these dotfiles have the rc suffix. Why?