neofetch with pride flags <3
Install Python >= 3.7 first. Then, just do:
pip install hyfetch
Currently, these distributions have existing packages for HyFetch:
- ArchLinux:
yay -S hyfetch
(Thanks to @ Aleksana) - NixOS:
nix-env -i hyfetch
(In Progress) - Guix:
guix install hyfetch
(Thanks to @ WammKD)
Currently, if you're using NixOS, you can use HyFetch with nix-env -if https://github.com/hykilpikonna/hyfetch/tarball/master -A hyfetch
When you run hyfetch
for the first time, it will prompt you to choose a color system and a preset. Just follow the prompt, and everything should work (hopefully). If something doesn't work, feel free to submit an issue!
A: Use hyfetch -c
A: You can try setting the colors' "lightness" using the --c-set-l
parameter. The value should be between 0 and 1. For example, if you are using dark theme and the rainbow flag is too dark to display, you can type:
hyfetch -p rainbow --c-set-l 0.8
Feel free to experiment with it!
- Add interactive configurator for adjusting brightness
- Add configuration to emphasize certain parts of the original ASCII art (to make icons like Fedora and Ubuntu look nicer)
- Fix: Make config path not on init but when it's actually needed.
- Remove
hypy_utils
dependency to make packaging easier.
- Fix terminal emulator detection (PR #2)
- Add more flags (PR #1)
- Fix missing dependency for setuptools
- Implement RGB to 8bit conversion
- Add support for Python 3.7 and 3.8
- Included 11 flag presets
- Ability to lighten colors with
--c-set-l <lightness>
- Command-line flag chooser
- Supports Python >= 3.9
A command-line system information tool written in bash 3.2+
Neofetch is a command-line system information tool written in bash 3.2+
. Neofetch displays information about your operating system, software and hardware in an aesthetic and visually pleasing way.
The overall purpose of Neofetch is to be used in screen-shots of your system. Neofetch shows the information other people want to see. There are other tools available for proper system statistic/diagnostics.
The information by default is displayed alongside your operating system's logo. You can further configure Neofetch to instead use an image, a custom ASCII file, your wallpaper or nothing at all.
You can further configure Neofetch to display exactly what you want it to. Through the use of command-line flags and the configuration file you can change existing information outputs or add your own custom ones.
Neofetch supports almost 150 different operating systems. From Linux to Windows, all the way to more obscure operating systems like Minix, AIX and Haiku. If your favourite operating system is unsupported: Open up an issue and support will be added.