At this point, we're ready to continue the series. We'll see the Terminal window is wider, which confirms that it has picked up our new preferences. Now, I'll close the "Preferences" window, close this terminal window, and click "Shell" from the menu and click "New Window". Those are all the changes that'll make to the preferences, but feel free to look through the rest and make the changes that you think will help you out. This will just allow me to scroll back through more of my previous commands when I'm working in the terminal. In the "Terminal" section I'll change the number of "Scrollback Lines" to be 10,000.In the "Window" section I will change the default number of columns for new windows to be 140.I won't make any changes in the "Text" section.This is definitely just a personal preference and you can try any of these color presets or create your own combination, but it's the one that I use for my own work, so I'll use it for the series. Once there, I'll click "Load Presets", and select "Pastel (Dark Background)". The first thing I'll do is go to the "Colors" section.I won't make any changes in the "General" section or the "Appearance" section but I will make a few changes in the profiles section. To view the preferences pane click iTerm the menu and select preferences.I will however, change a few of these to suit my preference. Since most of them will be personal preference, I won't go through all of them. Now that we're up to date, there are a number of settings you can change to affect the way iTerm works and behaves for you. Check the box to "Automatically download and install updates in the future" To install iTerm2 on Mac, first, install Homebrew and then download the iTerm2 installation file from the tools site.However, there have been updates since then, including bug fixes for Yosemite, so the first thing I'm going to do is install the updates. Now, as I'm recording this video, the version of iTerm that you get when you click that big button is actually version 2.0 because it's the "Last stable release". Click + sign at the bottom left and choose your keyboard shortcut, like Shift+CMD+T. On your iTerm, press CMD+, to open settings. I’d like to duplicate a tab with the same directory. Your system will ask if you're sure you want to open this file, and you do, so click "Open". When you press CMD+T, iTerm will open a new tab and the location is the or home directory. Let's go ahead and open up iTerm by going to the "Applications" folder and double clicking "iTerm". At this point, you can safely delete the zip file that iTerm came in.
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