Mlterm because it's the only low latency terminal with modern features.
xterm. It emulates a terminal. What else would I want a terminal emulator to do?
Whatever comes with the DE. I don't use it enough to have a favorite.
I am on st
as well. The externalpipe patch is the killer feature for me, it's so much more flexible than the usual URL open that's built into many other terminal emulators. xterm and urxvt had something similar too. Alacritty has an open issue for the feature.
I've just started using Black Box and I really like it.
Do any terminal emulators on Linux implement the tmux control protocol, i.e. tmux -cc
?
I use this with iTerm2 on macOS to turn tmux windows into native tabs, and to integrate with the native scroll back buffer.
I really miss this feature on Linux.
I always liked Terminator because of the easy splitscreening.
Konsole because it does everything I need it to and naturally integrates with Dolphin, which is something I like a lot. (F4 may be my most pressed Fn key thanks to this.)
As for customization, switched from bash to fish and use some fisher plugins for added convenience, along with the Tide prompt. I still use bash for some scripts, but that's about the extent of it.
Also, I use a light theme, so feel free to crucify me.
I've used xterm, rxvt, kitty, and now alacritty. I like alacritty because it's fast and simple. The only thing I don't like is that the default color scheme is off. If you run tmux in something like xterm, the bar is green. But in the default alacritty, it looks more yellow.
So I have this in my ~/.config/alacritty/alacritty.yml:
# XTerm's default colors
colors:
# Default colors
primary:
background: '#000000'
foreground: '#d8d8d8'
# Normal colors
normal:
black: '#000000'
red: '#cd0000'
green: '#00cd00'
yellow: '#cdcd00'
blue: '#0000ee'
magenta: '#cd00cd'
cyan: '#00cdcd'
white: '#e5e5e5'
# Bright colors
bright:
black: '#7f7f7f'
red: '#ff0000'
green: '#00ff00'
yellow: '#ffff00'
blue: '#5c5cff'
magenta: '#ff00ff'
cyan: '#00ffff'
white: '#ffffff'
Depends what I'm doing, where and how. I do use tmux everywhere though but at home xfce-terminal, At work I tend to use terminator for the wonders of group control but if connecting from a windows pc i'll be on windows-terminal.
For shell I try to use zsh everywhere with p10k and omz.
Konsole and gnome shell, super lame but I haven't had any trouble with them. Ftlog mintty on windows since it comes with git. I have a terrible time with the windows console
Started using Kona Ike dice it’s what came by default with KDE. Tried kitty, alacritty, foot (I think that was the name, on Wayland) and iterm2 on Mac… and came back to konsole in KDE and terminal.app in Mac.
Truth is I just need a simple terminal. Kitty and Alacritty and other terminals continuously had me in that’s-not-the-right-way, configuring terminal colors through ssh, or tmux compatability (kitty even says that you shouldn’t use tmux, and screen splitting should be done at the terminal, not in the server).
At the end of the day, I use whatever is installed where I work. So far, all “default” terminals seem to be enough.
Used to use Terminator on Cinnamon, but now I use Konsole with bindings to split horizontally and vertically on Plasma.
Don't matter much as long as I got tmux
Unless there's a Linux tty that supports -CC, like iterm2 for macOS.
st all the way. Quick to launch and it works well
Sakura. Simple and fast.
Yakuake as it's just one button, F12, away. I do what I need and puff it's gone.
I use both WezTerm and Kitty, they are both great with customization. You can see my config in dotfiles here https://github.com/haunt98/dotfiles
Kitty is great
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