
zshrc file's theme to ZSH_THEME="cobalt2" and refresh your terminal one more time ( % source ~/.zshrc). Head over to Wes Bos’ repo, copy the contents into your file and save. First, create the theme file in the following directory and then open it: % touch ~/.oh-my-zsh/themes/cobalt2.zsh-theme % open -a TextEdit ~/.oh-my-zsh/themes/cobalt2.zsh-theme Still want Cobalt2 huh? Well, let’s get down to it. If you are satisfied with what you see, great! Stop here and go enjoy your new terminal experience! Installing Cobalt2 Every time you run this command, or open up a new terminal, you will get a different theme! If you like what you see, notice the name of the theme that was loaded and replace it in your. Don’t like what you see? Run source ~/.zshrc and see what happens. Now open up your terminal again and you should see a different theme.

In line number 12 you will see the the following text: ZSH_THEME="robbyrussell"Īnd save. In your terminal navigate to your home directory an open the. You can check out all the available themes here.
#HYPERTERM TERMCSS INSTALL#
Installing Themesīefore we install the Cobalt2 theme, let’s have some fun with the built in themes that Oh My Zsh installed. In case you want to hide these files again (recommended) simply press shift+command+. If you have installed Node, Visual Studio Code on your machine you might see some other hidden folders as well. You can check this by using your Finder window and pressing shift+command+. zshrc config file in your home directory. Excellent! The installation script has also created the.
