Etan
Etan

Reputation: 1010

Displaying virtualenv

When I am in my virtualenv and it's active, the name of the environment appears in parentheses before the normal command line prompt. It looks like: (foo-env)User:~/Development/foo-env/foo$ where foo-env is the name of the environment. I was wondering if there was a way to make it that the command line prompt displayed something like (F)User:~/Development/foo-env/foo$ as opposed to the current display with (foo-env). If this is possible how would I go about doing this?

Upvotes: 5

Views: 4855

Answers (3)

Aaron Schumacher
Aaron Schumacher

Reputation: 3835

As an alternative, use pew (Python Env Wrapper). Then your PS1 won't get mangled when you use a virtualenv, and you can set your PS1 in your .bashrc (etc.) as usual, displaying the $VIRTUAL_ENV if it's set. The relevant piece of mine looks like this:

# python virtual env, however it comes to be
if [ -z ${VIRTUAL_ENV+x} ]
then
VENV_NOTICE=""
else
VENV_NOTICE=" (py: $(basename "$VIRTUAL_ENV"))"
fi

PS1='whatever $VENV_NOTICE else'

Upvotes: 1

Etan
Etan

Reputation: 1010

So I figured out how to do this. In the activate script the $PS1 is redefined to prepend the name of the env, in this case (foo-env). In order to prepend it with whatever you want you have to go into the activate script that you run to activate the virtualenv ([yourenv]/bin/activate]). There you change the line that that defines the new $PS1 from PS1="(`basename \"$VIRTUAL_ENV\"`)$PS1" to be whatever you want, here PS1="(F)$PS1".

Upvotes: 6

agf
agf

Reputation: 176920

You need to set the $PS1 environmental variable to change your prompt.

Take a look in the virtualenv config files for the setting.

See http://www.cyberciti.biz/tips/howto-linux-unix-bash-shell-setup-prompt.html for how to set it as you'd like. It sounds like you just need to replace the string foo-env with F.

Upvotes: 2

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