A blog header image with a dark purple-blue gradient background features the title "Zsh for Developers" in bold white text, followed by the subtitle "Language-Specific Setups to Boost Your Productivity." Below the text, a stylized terminal window is displayed with a green "zsh" prompt and large, colorful icons for Python (blue and yellow snake), JavaScript (yellow background with black "JS"), and Rust (orange gear with an "R"), representing the three programming languages discussed in the article. The design is clean, modern, and developer-focused.

Zsh for Developers: Language-Specific Setups to Boost Your Productivity

If you’re a developer who spends hours in the terminal, a well-tuned Zsh configuration isn’t just nice to have—it’s a productivity multiplier. I’ve covered the basics of Zsh in previous articles, but today I want to dive into specialized configurations for specific programming languages that can transform your development workflow. Over the years, I’ve constantly refined my Zsh setup, and I’ve discovered that language-specific customizations make a tremendous difference in daily coding efficiency. Let’s explore how to optimize Zsh for Python, JavaScript/Node.js, and Rust development with practical examples you can implement today. ...

Humble Tech Book Bundle: Learn You Some Code by No Starch Encore

Humble Tech Book Bundle: Learn You Some Code by No Starch Encore

About the Bundle This bundle includes the following books: The Art of WebAssembly by Rick Battagline Wicked Cool Ruby Scripts by Steve Pugh The C# Type System by Steve Love Rust for Rustaceans by Jon Gjengset Learn Physics with Functional Programming by Scott N. Walck Wicked Cool Shell Scripts, 2nd Edition by Dave Taylor, Brandon Perry GNU Make Book by John Graham-Cumming Bare Metal C by Stephen Oualline The Secret Life of Programs by Jonathan E. Steinhart Python Playground, 2nd Edition by Mahesh Venkitachalam Dead Simple Python by Jason C. McDonald The Missing README by Chris Riccomini, Dmitriy Ryaboy The Rust Programming Language, 2nd Edition by Steve Klabnik, Carol Nichols The Art of Clean Code by Christian Mayer Ruby Under a Microscope by Pat Shaughnessy Strange Code by Ronald T. Kneusel Perl One-Liners by Peteris Krumins Autotools, 2nd Edition by John Calcote