How to produce a PS1 prompt in bash or ksh93 similar to tcsh Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern) 2019 Community Moderator Election Results Why I closed the “Why is Kali so hard” questionbash equivalent of this use of tcsh “sched” command?Bash overwrites the first line, PS1 bash promptHow can avoid these spurious characters in my bash prompt?Show only current and parent directory in bash promptExecute command within current shell before every promptAlias for “cd” which shows current directory each time I change directories?Parameters in bash $PS1 variableHow do I display only the current directory while using powerline in the terminal prompt.?what shell is used to run a scriptprompt (PS1) doesn't update on bound command

Will I be more secure with my own router behind my ISP's router?

What's the difference between using dependency injection with a container and using a service locator?

Why do people think Winterfell crypts is the safest place for women, children & old people?

How can I introduce the names of fantasy creatures to the reader?

Compiling and throwing simple dynamic exceptions at runtime for JVM

Why isn't everyone flabbergasted about Bran's "gift"?

Raising a bilingual kid. When should we introduce the majority language?

Can the van der Waals coefficients be negative in the van der Waals equation for real gases?

Determine the generator of an ideal of ring of integers

Can I take recommendation from someone I met at a conference?

What documents does someone with a long-term visa need to travel to another Schengen country?

Unix AIX passing variable and arguments to expect and spawn

Why aren't road bike wheels tiny?

Why aren't these two solutions equivalent? Combinatorics problem

"Destructive force" carried by a B-52?

Do chord progressions usually move by fifths?

Etymology of 見舞い

Married in secret, can marital status in passport be changed at a later date?

Providing direct feedback to a product salesperson

Pointing to problems without suggesting solutions

Should man-made satellites feature an intelligent inverted "cow catcher"?

Can gravitational waves pass through a black hole?

How is an IPA symbol that lacks a name (e.g. ɲ) called?

Who's this lady in the war room?



How to produce a PS1 prompt in bash or ksh93 similar to tcsh



Announcing the arrival of Valued Associate #679: Cesar Manara
Planned maintenance scheduled April 23, 2019 at 23:30 UTC (7:30pm US/Eastern)
2019 Community Moderator Election Results
Why I closed the “Why is Kali so hard” questionbash equivalent of this use of tcsh “sched” command?Bash overwrites the first line, PS1 bash promptHow can avoid these spurious characters in my bash prompt?Show only current and parent directory in bash promptExecute command within current shell before every promptAlias for “cd” which shows current directory each time I change directories?Parameters in bash $PS1 variableHow do I display only the current directory while using powerline in the terminal prompt.?what shell is used to run a scriptprompt (PS1) doesn't update on bound command



.everyoneloves__top-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__mid-leaderboard:empty,.everyoneloves__bot-mid-leaderboard:empty margin-bottom:0;








1















In tcsh, I have the default:



prompt [%m:%c3] %n%# 


which gives prompts like:



[woehler:hacking/c/hello] ajcarr% 


and



[woehler:~] ajcarr% 


In other words, the current directory and up to the next two above it in the path.



In ksh93 or bash, the substitution of $HOME by ~ is easy, as is extracting the name of just the current directory, but I have yet to find a way of replicating the %c3 behaviour of tcsh. At present in ksh93 I have:



[ajcarr@Woehler] hello $ 


and



[ajcarr@Woehler] ~ $ 


Does anyone have any suggestions about how to do this?










share|improve this question






























    1















    In tcsh, I have the default:



    prompt [%m:%c3] %n%# 


    which gives prompts like:



    [woehler:hacking/c/hello] ajcarr% 


    and



    [woehler:~] ajcarr% 


    In other words, the current directory and up to the next two above it in the path.



    In ksh93 or bash, the substitution of $HOME by ~ is easy, as is extracting the name of just the current directory, but I have yet to find a way of replicating the %c3 behaviour of tcsh. At present in ksh93 I have:



    [ajcarr@Woehler] hello $ 


    and



    [ajcarr@Woehler] ~ $ 


    Does anyone have any suggestions about how to do this?










    share|improve this question


























      1












      1








      1


      0






      In tcsh, I have the default:



      prompt [%m:%c3] %n%# 


      which gives prompts like:



      [woehler:hacking/c/hello] ajcarr% 


      and



      [woehler:~] ajcarr% 


      In other words, the current directory and up to the next two above it in the path.



      In ksh93 or bash, the substitution of $HOME by ~ is easy, as is extracting the name of just the current directory, but I have yet to find a way of replicating the %c3 behaviour of tcsh. At present in ksh93 I have:



      [ajcarr@Woehler] hello $ 


      and



      [ajcarr@Woehler] ~ $ 


      Does anyone have any suggestions about how to do this?










      share|improve this question
















      In tcsh, I have the default:



      prompt [%m:%c3] %n%# 


      which gives prompts like:



      [woehler:hacking/c/hello] ajcarr% 


      and



      [woehler:~] ajcarr% 


      In other words, the current directory and up to the next two above it in the path.



      In ksh93 or bash, the substitution of $HOME by ~ is easy, as is extracting the name of just the current directory, but I have yet to find a way of replicating the %c3 behaviour of tcsh. At present in ksh93 I have:



      [ajcarr@Woehler] hello $ 


      and



      [ajcarr@Woehler] ~ $ 


      Does anyone have any suggestions about how to do this?







      bash ksh prompt tcsh






      share|improve this question















      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question








      edited 1 hour ago









      steeldriver

      38.1k45489




      38.1k45489










      asked 2 hours ago









      Alun CarrAlun Carr

      6612




      6612




















          2 Answers
          2






          active

          oldest

          votes


















          1














          For bash, you could achieve similar results by setting the PROMPT_DIRTRIM variable:



          $ PS1='[u@h] w$ '
          [schaller@r2d2] ~$ pwd
          /home/schaller
          [schaller@r2d2] ~$ PROMPT_DIRTRIM=3
          [schaller@r2d2] ~$ cd /home/schaller/tmp/513924/another/directory/here
          [schaller@r2d2] ~/.../another/directory/here$





          share|improve this answer






























            1














            In ksh93:



            PS1='$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/ $ '
            share/doc/libnl-3-dev $ _

            PS1='[$HOSTNAME%%.*:$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/] $USER% '
            [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


            If you want it to also replace $HOME with ~, something nastier[1] is needed:



            PS1='$(d=$PWD/#$HOME/"~";printf %s "$d#$d%?/*/*/*?/") $ '
            ~/w/maemo $ cd sb2-pathmaps
            w/maemo/sb2-pathmaps $ _


            This should also work in bash, though bash has its own prompt escapes (eg. h for $HOSTNAME%%.*) and path shortening mechanism (with PROMPT_DIRTRIM).



            zsh has prompt escapes quite similar but not identical to tcsh:



            zsh$ PS1='[%m:%3c] %n%# '
            [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


            [1] there may be some consolation in the fact that ksh93 doesn't fork() another process for subshells which contain only builtins, like that $( ...; printf ...) ;-)






            share|improve this answer

























              Your Answer








              StackExchange.ready(function()
              var channelOptions =
              tags: "".split(" "),
              id: "106"
              ;
              initTagRenderer("".split(" "), "".split(" "), channelOptions);

              StackExchange.using("externalEditor", function()
              // Have to fire editor after snippets, if snippets enabled
              if (StackExchange.settings.snippets.snippetsEnabled)
              StackExchange.using("snippets", function()
              createEditor();
              );

              else
              createEditor();

              );

              function createEditor()
              StackExchange.prepareEditor(
              heartbeatType: 'answer',
              autoActivateHeartbeat: false,
              convertImagesToLinks: false,
              noModals: true,
              showLowRepImageUploadWarning: true,
              reputationToPostImages: null,
              bindNavPrevention: true,
              postfix: "",
              imageUploader:
              brandingHtml: "Powered by u003ca class="icon-imgur-white" href="https://imgur.com/"u003eu003c/au003e",
              contentPolicyHtml: "User contributions licensed under u003ca href="https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-sa/3.0/"u003ecc by-sa 3.0 with attribution requiredu003c/au003e u003ca href="https://stackoverflow.com/legal/content-policy"u003e(content policy)u003c/au003e",
              allowUrls: true
              ,
              onDemand: true,
              discardSelector: ".discard-answer"
              ,immediatelyShowMarkdownHelp:true
              );



              );













              draft saved

              draft discarded


















              StackExchange.ready(
              function ()
              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f513924%2fhow-to-produce-a-ps1-prompt-in-bash-or-ksh93-similar-to-tcsh%23new-answer', 'question_page');

              );

              Post as a guest















              Required, but never shown

























              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes








              2 Answers
              2






              active

              oldest

              votes









              active

              oldest

              votes






              active

              oldest

              votes









              1














              For bash, you could achieve similar results by setting the PROMPT_DIRTRIM variable:



              $ PS1='[u@h] w$ '
              [schaller@r2d2] ~$ pwd
              /home/schaller
              [schaller@r2d2] ~$ PROMPT_DIRTRIM=3
              [schaller@r2d2] ~$ cd /home/schaller/tmp/513924/another/directory/here
              [schaller@r2d2] ~/.../another/directory/here$





              share|improve this answer



























                1














                For bash, you could achieve similar results by setting the PROMPT_DIRTRIM variable:



                $ PS1='[u@h] w$ '
                [schaller@r2d2] ~$ pwd
                /home/schaller
                [schaller@r2d2] ~$ PROMPT_DIRTRIM=3
                [schaller@r2d2] ~$ cd /home/schaller/tmp/513924/another/directory/here
                [schaller@r2d2] ~/.../another/directory/here$





                share|improve this answer

























                  1












                  1








                  1







                  For bash, you could achieve similar results by setting the PROMPT_DIRTRIM variable:



                  $ PS1='[u@h] w$ '
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~$ pwd
                  /home/schaller
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~$ PROMPT_DIRTRIM=3
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~$ cd /home/schaller/tmp/513924/another/directory/here
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~/.../another/directory/here$





                  share|improve this answer













                  For bash, you could achieve similar results by setting the PROMPT_DIRTRIM variable:



                  $ PS1='[u@h] w$ '
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~$ pwd
                  /home/schaller
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~$ PROMPT_DIRTRIM=3
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~$ cd /home/schaller/tmp/513924/another/directory/here
                  [schaller@r2d2] ~/.../another/directory/here$






                  share|improve this answer












                  share|improve this answer



                  share|improve this answer










                  answered 1 hour ago









                  Jeff SchallerJeff Schaller

                  45.2k1164147




                  45.2k1164147























                      1














                      In ksh93:



                      PS1='$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/ $ '
                      share/doc/libnl-3-dev $ _

                      PS1='[$HOSTNAME%%.*:$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/] $USER% '
                      [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                      If you want it to also replace $HOME with ~, something nastier[1] is needed:



                      PS1='$(d=$PWD/#$HOME/"~";printf %s "$d#$d%?/*/*/*?/") $ '
                      ~/w/maemo $ cd sb2-pathmaps
                      w/maemo/sb2-pathmaps $ _


                      This should also work in bash, though bash has its own prompt escapes (eg. h for $HOSTNAME%%.*) and path shortening mechanism (with PROMPT_DIRTRIM).



                      zsh has prompt escapes quite similar but not identical to tcsh:



                      zsh$ PS1='[%m:%3c] %n%# '
                      [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                      [1] there may be some consolation in the fact that ksh93 doesn't fork() another process for subshells which contain only builtins, like that $( ...; printf ...) ;-)






                      share|improve this answer





























                        1














                        In ksh93:



                        PS1='$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/ $ '
                        share/doc/libnl-3-dev $ _

                        PS1='[$HOSTNAME%%.*:$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/] $USER% '
                        [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                        If you want it to also replace $HOME with ~, something nastier[1] is needed:



                        PS1='$(d=$PWD/#$HOME/"~";printf %s "$d#$d%?/*/*/*?/") $ '
                        ~/w/maemo $ cd sb2-pathmaps
                        w/maemo/sb2-pathmaps $ _


                        This should also work in bash, though bash has its own prompt escapes (eg. h for $HOSTNAME%%.*) and path shortening mechanism (with PROMPT_DIRTRIM).



                        zsh has prompt escapes quite similar but not identical to tcsh:



                        zsh$ PS1='[%m:%3c] %n%# '
                        [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                        [1] there may be some consolation in the fact that ksh93 doesn't fork() another process for subshells which contain only builtins, like that $( ...; printf ...) ;-)






                        share|improve this answer



























                          1












                          1








                          1







                          In ksh93:



                          PS1='$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/ $ '
                          share/doc/libnl-3-dev $ _

                          PS1='[$HOSTNAME%%.*:$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/] $USER% '
                          [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                          If you want it to also replace $HOME with ~, something nastier[1] is needed:



                          PS1='$(d=$PWD/#$HOME/"~";printf %s "$d#$d%?/*/*/*?/") $ '
                          ~/w/maemo $ cd sb2-pathmaps
                          w/maemo/sb2-pathmaps $ _


                          This should also work in bash, though bash has its own prompt escapes (eg. h for $HOSTNAME%%.*) and path shortening mechanism (with PROMPT_DIRTRIM).



                          zsh has prompt escapes quite similar but not identical to tcsh:



                          zsh$ PS1='[%m:%3c] %n%# '
                          [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                          [1] there may be some consolation in the fact that ksh93 doesn't fork() another process for subshells which contain only builtins, like that $( ...; printf ...) ;-)






                          share|improve this answer















                          In ksh93:



                          PS1='$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/ $ '
                          share/doc/libnl-3-dev $ _

                          PS1='[$HOSTNAME%%.*:$PWD#$PWD%?/*/*/*?/] $USER% '
                          [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                          If you want it to also replace $HOME with ~, something nastier[1] is needed:



                          PS1='$(d=$PWD/#$HOME/"~";printf %s "$d#$d%?/*/*/*?/") $ '
                          ~/w/maemo $ cd sb2-pathmaps
                          w/maemo/sb2-pathmaps $ _


                          This should also work in bash, though bash has its own prompt escapes (eg. h for $HOSTNAME%%.*) and path shortening mechanism (with PROMPT_DIRTRIM).



                          zsh has prompt escapes quite similar but not identical to tcsh:



                          zsh$ PS1='[%m:%3c] %n%# '
                          [host:share/doc/libnl-3-dev] user% _


                          [1] there may be some consolation in the fact that ksh93 doesn't fork() another process for subshells which contain only builtins, like that $( ...; printf ...) ;-)







                          share|improve this answer














                          share|improve this answer



                          share|improve this answer








                          edited 3 mins ago

























                          answered 1 hour ago









                          mosvymosvy

                          10.6k11338




                          10.6k11338



























                              draft saved

                              draft discarded
















































                              Thanks for contributing an answer to Unix & Linux Stack Exchange!


                              • Please be sure to answer the question. Provide details and share your research!

                              But avoid


                              • Asking for help, clarification, or responding to other answers.

                              • Making statements based on opinion; back them up with references or personal experience.

                              To learn more, see our tips on writing great answers.




                              draft saved


                              draft discarded














                              StackExchange.ready(
                              function ()
                              StackExchange.openid.initPostLogin('.new-post-login', 'https%3a%2f%2funix.stackexchange.com%2fquestions%2f513924%2fhow-to-produce-a-ps1-prompt-in-bash-or-ksh93-similar-to-tcsh%23new-answer', 'question_page');

                              );

                              Post as a guest















                              Required, but never shown





















































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown

































                              Required, but never shown














                              Required, but never shown












                              Required, but never shown







                              Required, but never shown







                              Popular posts from this blog

                              Can not update quote_id field of “quote_item” table magento 2Magento 2.1 - We can't remove the item. (Shopping Cart doesnt allow us to remove items before becomes empty)Add value for custom quote item attribute using REST apiREST API endpoint v1/carts/cartId/items always returns error messageCorrect way to save entries to databaseHow to remove all associated quote objects of a customer completelyMagento 2 - Save value from custom input field to quote_itemGet quote_item data using quote id and product id filter in Magento 2How to set additional data to quote_item table from controller in Magento 2?What is the purpose of additional_data column in quote_item table in magento2Set Custom Price to Quote item magento2 from controller

                              Magento 2 disable Secret Key on URL's from terminal The Next CEO of Stack OverflowMagento 2 Shortcut/GUI tool to perform commandline tasks for windowsIn menu add configuration linkMagento oAuth : Generating access token and access secretMagento 2 security key issue in Third-Party API redirect URIPublic actions in admin controllersHow to Disable Cache in Custom WidgetURL Key not changing in Magento 2Product URL Key gets deleted when importing custom options - Magento 2Problem with reindex terminalMagento 2 - bin/magento Commands not working in Cpanel Terminal

                              Aasi (pallopeli) Navigointivalikko