- Latest Version:
- Requirements:Mac OS X 10.8 or later
- Author / Product:George Nachman / iTerm2 for Mac
- Old Versions:
- Filename:iTerm2-3_0_8.zip
- MD5 Checksum:Shortcut bar 1 8 15 equals. e382e8322e8d694fa7b34d83d9396fbb
![Iterm Iterm](https://sites.google.com/site/grouptwonaja/_/rsrc/1416216659199/home/ngan-chin-thi6-rabb-cadkar-ran-xahar/4.5.jpg)
## 3.0.3 - 2019-02-24 ### Added - Null check for BlockColors and ItemColors. For some reason, these turn up null at random. This should prevent the crash when it happens but certain blocks or items may be missing their colors. ## 3.0.2 - 2019-02-23 ### Added - Glowroses can now be planted in vanilla flower pots. This amplifies their light. Cancel 0 Cart 0 items in shopping cart. There are 576 reviews 576. Free Upgrade WP. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars. There are 8529 reviews 8K. Free Win IP Camera. Rated 4.5 out of 5 stars. There are 375 reviews 375. Free + Flipkart. Rated 4 out of 5 stars. Iterm cheetsheet. GitHub Gist: instantly share code, notes, and snippets. Ansi 0 Color Blue Component 0.4716187 Green Component 0.8171692 Red Component 0.9102478 Ansi 1 Color Blue Component 0.7642517 Green Component 0.9198761 Red Component 0.036438 Ansi 10 Color Blue Component 0.3742676 Green Component 0.0227661 Red Component 0.4055786 Ansi 11 Color Blue Component 0.
iTerm2 for Mac is a fork of the older project. iTerm is a Terminal replacement and the successor of iTerm. It focuses on speed, internationalization, and building new features to improve your life. Divide a tab up into multiple panes, each one of which shows a different session. You can slice vertically and horizontally and create any number of panes in any imaginable arrangement. iTerm2 for macOS has a lot of features. Every conceivable desire a terminal user might have has been foreseen and solved. And these are just the main attractions!
Split Panes
Divide a tab up into multiple panes, each one showing a different session. You can slice vertically and horizontally and create any number of panes in any imaginable arrangement.
Hotkey Window
Register a hotkey that brings iTerm app to the foreground when you're in another application. A terminal is always a keypress away. You can choose to have the hotkey open a dedicated window. This gives you an always-available terminal (like Visor, Guake, or Yakuake) at your fingertips.
Search
The app comes with a robust find-on-page feature. The UI stays out of the way. All matches are immediately highlighted. Even regular expression support is offered!
Autocomplete
Just type the start of any word that has ever appeared in your window and then Cmd-; will pop open a window with suggestions. The word you're looking for is usually on top of the list!
Mouseless Copy
Use the Find feature to begin searching for text. Press tab to expand the selection to the right or shift-tab to expand the selection to the left. Option-enter pastes the current match.
Paste History
Paste history lets you revisit recently copied or pasted text. You can even opt to have the history saved to disk so it will never be lost.
Instant Replay
Instant replay lets you travel back in time. It's like TiVo for your terminal!
Configurability
Map any key to any function. Assign separate functions to each option key--or even remap all the modifier keys. You can customize iTerm2's appearance to suit your needs: enable transparency, background blur, background images, and much more.
Unixyness
Coming from a Unix world? You'll feel at home with focus follows the mouse, copy on select, middle button paste, and keyboard shortcuts to avoid mousing.
256 Colors (or more!)
With 256-color mode, Vim explodes with photorealism: the terminal is a medley of color and code comes alive. In version 3, 24-bit color is supported.
Readability
Do you lose your cursor when there are lots of different colors or have programs display hard-to-read color combinations? With the Smart Cursor Color and Minimum Contrast features, you can ensure that these problems are gone for good.
Mouse Reporting
You can use the mouse to position the cursor, highlight text, and perform other functions in programs like Vim and Emacs with the mouse reporting feature.
Growl Support
You can choose to receive Growl notifications of activity, bells, and more. Feel free to let a long job run in the background, secure in the knowledge that you'll know when it's done.
Exposé Tab
Like macOS's Exposé feature, the program shows all your tabs on one screen. Better yet, you can search through them all at once. Go ahead and open as many tabs as you want--you can always find what you're looking for.
Tagged Profiles
Do you need to store separate configurations for many different hosts? The tool provides a taggable and searchable profiles database so you can easily find the profile you're looking for.
Multi-Lingual
The app features excellent internationalization support, including support for Unicode combining marks, double-width characters, and all Unicode planes.
Triggers
The app supports user-defined triggers, which are actions that run when text matching a regular expression is received. You can use it to highlight words, automatically respond to prompts, notify you when something important happens, and more.
Smart Selection
iTerm 2 can perform 'smart selection' to highlight URLs, email addresses, filenames, and more by recognizing what is under the cursor and choosing how much text to select.
Note: Requires 64-bit processor.
Split Panes
Divide a tab up into multiple panes, each one showing a different session. You can slice vertically and horizontally and create any number of panes in any imaginable arrangement.
Hotkey Window
Register a hotkey that brings iTerm app to the foreground when you're in another application. A terminal is always a keypress away. You can choose to have the hotkey open a dedicated window. This gives you an always-available terminal (like Visor, Guake, or Yakuake) at your fingertips.
Search
The app comes with a robust find-on-page feature. The UI stays out of the way. All matches are immediately highlighted. Even regular expression support is offered!
Autocomplete
Just type the start of any word that has ever appeared in your window and then Cmd-; will pop open a window with suggestions. The word you're looking for is usually on top of the list!
Mouseless Copy
Use the Find feature to begin searching for text. Press tab to expand the selection to the right or shift-tab to expand the selection to the left. Option-enter pastes the current match.
Paste History
Paste history lets you revisit recently copied or pasted text. You can even opt to have the history saved to disk so it will never be lost.
Instant Replay
Instant replay lets you travel back in time. It's like TiVo for your terminal!
Configurability
Map any key to any function. Assign separate functions to each option key--or even remap all the modifier keys. You can customize iTerm2's appearance to suit your needs: enable transparency, background blur, background images, and much more.
Unixyness
Coming from a Unix world? You'll feel at home with focus follows the mouse, copy on select, middle button paste, and keyboard shortcuts to avoid mousing.
256 Colors (or more!)
With 256-color mode, Vim explodes with photorealism: the terminal is a medley of color and code comes alive. In version 3, 24-bit color is supported.
Readability
Do you lose your cursor when there are lots of different colors or have programs display hard-to-read color combinations? With the Smart Cursor Color and Minimum Contrast features, you can ensure that these problems are gone for good.
Mouse Reporting
You can use the mouse to position the cursor, highlight text, and perform other functions in programs like Vim and Emacs with the mouse reporting feature.
Growl Support
You can choose to receive Growl notifications of activity, bells, and more. Feel free to let a long job run in the background, secure in the knowledge that you'll know when it's done.
Exposé Tab
Like macOS's Exposé feature, the program shows all your tabs on one screen. Better yet, you can search through them all at once. Go ahead and open as many tabs as you want--you can always find what you're looking for.
Tagged Profiles
Do you need to store separate configurations for many different hosts? The tool provides a taggable and searchable profiles database so you can easily find the profile you're looking for.
Multi-Lingual
The app features excellent internationalization support, including support for Unicode combining marks, double-width characters, and all Unicode planes.
Triggers
The app supports user-defined triggers, which are actions that run when text matching a regular expression is received. You can use it to highlight words, automatically respond to prompts, notify you when something important happens, and more.
Smart Selection
iTerm 2 can perform 'smart selection' to highlight URLs, email addresses, filenames, and more by recognizing what is under the cursor and choosing how much text to select.
Note: Requires 64-bit processor.
Using a few guides on the web and a little bit of ingenuity I was ableto get my FTDI-based, USB to 2x Serial adapter working in Mac OSX 10.9Mavericks with iTerm 2. This post documents the process and resourcesused in the hope of becoming the definitive guide to setting up a USBserial adapter in OSX and using iTerm2 as the terminal emulator. Even ifit isn’t quite definitive, it should at least be useful to others - Ihope!
Choose your weapon
The dual serial adapter above is my weapon ofchoice. You can pick one up for about £20 on Amazon(not an affiliatelink). Generally speaking, I’ve had better experience with FTDI chipsetsso if you are in the market for an adapter, I’d recommend checking thechipset first…
Driver Installation
For FTDI
- Download the FTDI VCP driver for OSX
- Install the drivers
For Prolific
- Download the drivers from here
- Install the drivers
A quick note on terminal emulation in OSX
Most likely you have used a USB-serial adapter in Windows. Wheninstalled It appears as a COM port, you point TeraTerm or HyperTerminalto that COM port and everything automagically works. In OSX things aredecidely more UNIX-like. When the adapter is installed you will see anew “tty” and “cu” devices in “/dev”. To access these you need anapplication to attach to the “cu” device.
Why “cu” and not “tty”? Because TTY-lines are for inboundconnections and Call-Up ('cu’) lines are for outbound.
There are a number of applications that can do this, but I’m going tofocus on using “screen” as it’s built in to OSX.
![Iterm 3 2 8 0 Iterm 3 2 8 0](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/8/8d/ITerm2_v3_Screen_Shot_With_Tabs_Panes_UTF-8_and_Search.png/1200px-ITerm2_v3_Screen_Shot_With_Tabs_Panes_UTF-8_and_Search.png)
Setting up iTerm2
I use iTerm2 for all my terminal needs in OSX, more on that later…Right now we’re going to focus on adding a profile for your USBadapter(s).
- Open iTerm2 and enter the following to find your usb serial TTY’s
- Open the Preferences menu and click Profiles
- Add a new profile (or duplicate your existing one) a give it adescriptive name. Something like 'USB Serial 1 - 9600baud” forexample.
- In the “Command” section, select Command and enter the following,replacing FTDYUKSO with the output from Step 1.The
in the “screen” command you can add anything from thescreen manpage and/or a comma separated list of values from thestty manpage The following will give you a 9600 baud, 8-bits percharacter, no parity and 1 stop bit (default for most networkdevices) - Repeat steps 3 and 4 for the second adapter.
- Fin
Using your USB Serial adapter
Iterm 3 2 8 0 6
- Open iTerm
- Select one of the profiles you just created
- Hit “Enter” and begin
- To quit, press CTRL+A+K or CTRL+A then CTRL+
Iterm 3 2 8 0 8
Note: If you don’t quit properly, i.e just closing the tab in iTerm,you will leave the your session alive and you won’t be able toreconnect until you kill the session manually.
Conclusion
Hopefully this guide has been useful in helping you get set up with yourUSB serial adapter in Mac OSX. If you find mistakes, have feedback orquestions feel free to use the comments section below.
Iterm 3 2 8 0t
Resources
Iterm 3 2 8 0 3
The following resources were used to write this blog post: