6

My .bashrc:

# show a short way
shortwd() {
    num_dirs=3
    pwd_symbol="..."
    newPWD="${PWD/#$HOME/~}"
    if [ $(echo -n $newPWD | awk -F '/' '{print NF}') -gt $num_dirs ]; then
        newPWD=$(echo -n $newPWD | awk -F '/' '{print $1 "/.../" $(NF-1) "/" $(NF)}')
    fi
    echo -n $newPWD
}
# show git branch
git_branch() {
   git symbolic-ref HEAD --short
}

export PS1='\n$CONDA_PROMPT_MODIFIER\e[38;5;211m$(shortwd)\e[38;5;48m [$(git_branch)]\e[0m$'

now the bash look like:

(base) /.../MyCode/python [master]$

but after I run conda activate env to switch my conda env. It get a BUG that,whatever command I run ,there always show the current conda env name in the end of command output.like this:

(base) /.../MyCode/python [master]$ls
code_study keras mxnet my_tools other pyqt5 pytorch qt_diankeyuan test windowsCode
(base)

enter image description here

If I want to make the conda env name do not always show in end of the each command output,what should I do? enter image description here

3
  • unrelated, sorry, but what benefit do you get from setting PS1 to anything other than $? Nov 21, 2019 at 11:10
  • 2
    @oguzismail Many people use the prompt to display context which they feel is relevant, like which host they are on (many people log in to many places and need to quickly find out where they are before saying rm -rf /*) or what they are in the middle of, as well as the time of day etc.
    – tripleee
    Nov 21, 2019 at 11:17
  • @manv Sure, thanks for the feedback; reopened.
    – tripleee
    Nov 21, 2019 at 19:48

1 Answer 1

7

I would suggest letting Conda handle its own part of modifying PS1 and use your nice custom bash functions for the other parts. For this, I would change the PS1 to

export PS1='\e[38;5;211m$(shortwd)\e[38;5;48m [$(git_branch)]\e[0m$'

and move this to before the Conda-managed section of your .bashrc. Next, set the Conda configuration variable env_prompt to what you want:

conda config --set env_prompt "\n({default_env}) "

You can read more about the templateable variables in the description conda config --describe env_prompt.

The only way this deviates from the behavior you defined is that when no envs are active you won't get the extra newline, but hopefully you can live with that. The other downside is that Conda only allows prepending.


As an aside, your git_branch function is going emit to stderr when not in a repo, so you may want to divert that so it doesn't hit your session. For example,

# show git branch                                                                                                                                      
git_branch() {
    git symbolic-ref HEAD --short 2> /dev/null
}
4
  • 1
    There is no "Conda-managed section" in my .bashrc
    – rkedge
    Apr 8, 2021 at 15:34
  • 2
    @rkedge, the relevant part of my ~/.bashrc starts with # >>> conda initialize >>> , and has __conda_setup somewhere soon. It ends with # <<< conda initialize <<<. When I moved this after any PS1 stuff in ~/.bashrc, it fixed the problems I was having with my $PS1. You might want to look in ~/.bash_profile, ~/.bash_login, or maybe even something like ~/.profile or ~/.login. If there's nothing there, you might have to look into /etc/, e.g. /etc/bashrc or /etc/profile. PS1 stuff should be in ~/.bashrc (maybe in /etc/bashrc, but it doesn't feel quite right). Feb 3, 2022 at 5:24
  • would this work using zsh? Mar 24, 2022 at 18:11
  • OK! It works ok for me , nice and simple Jan 21 at 2:52

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