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I've been trying to find out how to set the directory for a rope project for ropevim to find automatically (I still haven't succeeded in this), and in doing this I have discovered the $PROJECT environment variable in zsh.

Once I set this variable to a specific path, for instance the root of my project

~ # cd my_project_folder
~/my_project_folder # export PROJECT=`pwd`

The prompt is changed so that all paths are printed as relative to PROJECT, the project root, like so

PROJECT # cd sub_folder
PROJECT/sub_folder #

which is pretty neat as it shortens the path, but I would like to change the prompt to display for instance the project name instead of PROJECT.

I have tried to search the zsh documentation for any mention of this environment variable, but no luck. Has anyone encountered this variable before? bash seems to ignore this environment variable.

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  • There's nothing special about the variable name PROJECT, what you're seeing is just the effect of a zsh "named directory". (As pointed out in the the answer below.) You might equally well have called your variable PROJECT1, or FOOBAR or anything else for that matter, it's the fact that it contains a path name that matters.
    – zrajm
    Aug 3, 2013 at 5:33

1 Answer 1

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You could probably make use of a project specific named directory.

For example, with a directory structure:

~/projects/foo
~/projects/foo/bar

in your ~/.zshrc:

FOO=~/projects/foo

your prompt could look similar to this:

 ~/projects  #ls
foo
 ~/projects  #cd foo 
 ~FOO  #ls
 bar
 ~/FOO  #cd bar
 ~/FOO/bar  #

This uses %~ to expand the current directory within the prompt:

As %d and %/, but if the current working directory has a named directory as its prefix, that part is replaced by a ~ followed by the name of the directory.

(found under "SIMPLE PROMPT ESCAPES" in the linked man zshmisc page).

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  • Ah, this makes sense now. I was thinking it was a special variable name. This is really cool, thank you.
    – leifdenby
    Jan 5, 2013 at 17:42

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