If you have our experimental shell integration feature enabled, then you will also see Select Command and Select Output as options.Įnabling shell integration marks vary from shell to shell. If you have another pane open, then you will also see Close Pane as another option. If you highlight text and open the right click context menu, you will also see a Copy option next to Paste. "experimental.rightClickContextMenu": trueĪfter enabling this feature, you will be able to see a context menu after right-clicking the shell in your terminal.īy default, you will see Paste, Split Pane, Duplicate Tab, and Close Tab as your options. To manually enable this feature, add "experimental.rightClickContextMenu": "true" in the defaults section of your profiles section of your settings.json: JSON "profiles": This is an experimental feature that needs to be manually enabled. If I print the value of MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE in any other profile such as Command Prompt, then I will see “Hi from defaults!” This means that if I print the value of MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE in my PowerShell profile, then I will see “Hi from PowerShell!” The environment variables that you set within a specific profile will only be available for that specific profile. The environment variables you set in defaults will be available to all of your profiles. "MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE": "Hi from PowerShell!" "MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE": "Hi from defaults!" In the example below, I set two environment variables, both named MY_ENVIRONMENT_VARIABLE, in defaults and in my PowerShell profile: JSON "profiles": Shoutout to for this community-contributed feature! This can be done in defaults or in any profile. In addition, you can now add environment variables in your settings.json. The Windows Terminal will now reload the environment variables automatically when a new tab or pane is opened! No longer do you need to fully shut down the Terminal after installing something and changing the PATH – just open a new tab (or restart the current one) and head off to the races. You will also be able to move tabs from one terminal window into the other. Starting in Windows Terminal Preview 1.18, you will now be able to tear out the tabs in Windows Terminal. Yes! We finally have tab tearout! This has been a highly requested feature since the dawn of Terminal time. Additionally, Windows Terminal Preview is getting an update to version 1.18 and will include all the features detailed here, so let’s talk all about them!Īs always, you can install Windows Terminal and Windows Terminal Preview from the Microsoft Store, from the GitHub releases page, or by using winget. Welcome back to another Windows Terminal release! This release updates Windows Terminal to version 1.17 and includes all of the features from this previous blog post.
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