this post was submitted on 16 Jul 2023
182 points (97.4% liked)

linuxmasterrace

2050 readers
1 users here now

A community for Linux enthusiasts.

May your htop stats be low and your beard grow long

Welcome to [email protected] former r/linuxmasterrace members and existing Lemmyverse citizens: Feel free to join the newly created [email protected] community.

Let’s make the full transition to the decentralized Fediverse!

founded 1 year ago
MODERATORS
 

I’m moving my posts from Reddit to Lemmy before delete them.

This post is from 2020-09-03.

you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
[–] [email protected] 1 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

It's been a while since I've tried zsh, to be honest, but from what I can remember and what I've seen online, is that fish a little bit more "modern" and has sensible defaults out of the box. While you can probably achieve the same with zsh (and probably bash as well, with lots of tweaking), fish is just easier to get up and running as supposed to having zsh and installing some sort of plugin manager such as "oh my zsh" and researching and installing a bunch of things yourself.

My experience with zsh wasn't amazing, maybe because it may have required a bit of tweaking and I didn't feel like it at the time. For fish, I just changed the shell, researched a little about available plugins, and decided I wantef fzf and tide, and that's basically it.

I don't know if either fish or zsh is more customizable, but I'm happy with it. Bottom line appears to be, zsh has been around very long, like bash, but fish is much newer, therefore feels more "modern", whatever that may mean. The flip-side of that is that zsh is a bit more like POSIX-compliant, even though I don't think it really is. So zsh is more like bash than fish is, while offering more features than bash.

Try out both, if you have the time. :) If you don't have the time, go with fish.