* Updating Oh My Zsh shop URLs
Linking directly to the Oh My Zsh inventory vs the top-level store with non-OMZ items.
* Updating link to Oh My Zsh products in the install script
* Updating link to Oh My Zsh shop products in the upgrade script
* Getting rid of 't-' in shirts for now
Currently it shows for example the following:
DEVICE_ID -- transport_id:2
which doesn't really ease device selection. I've adapted the awk script to print
device name with it's model name, see the example below:
DEVICE_ID -- Pixel_3(blueline)
* The check for the asdf installation directory is more precise:
The existence of the directory `$HOME/.asdf` does not mean that it is the installation
directory of `asdf`. It will also be created after installing at least one asdf plugin.
* Completions, while installed with homebrew, are now expected on an alternative location.
This change references `$RANDOM` outside the subshell to refresh it for the
next subshell invocation. Otherwise, subsequent runs of the function get the
same value and, if run simultaneously, they may clobber each others' temp .z
files.
This is due to how zsh distributes RANDOM values when running inside a
subshell:
subshells that reference RANDOM will result in identical pseudo-random
values unless the value of RANDOM is referenced or seeded in the parent
shell in between subshell invocations
See: http://zsh.sourceforge.net/Doc/Release/Parameters.html#index-RANDOM
A utility function now parses the output of git --version and set the
alias for git stash to 'git stash push' iff the current version of Git
is greater than 2.13; it falls back to 'git stash save' otherwise.
This change makes the plugin check if an identity is loaded by looking
first at the key filename reported by `ssh-add -l`. This fixes the use
case where ssh-keygen is not able to output the fingerprint of a key,
such as the one reported on #7516.
Now, for an identity to be passed onto ssh-add, it has to fail the
match for a loaded identity, both filename and signature.