zoxide
A cd command that learns your habits
Table of contents
Introduction
zoxide is a blazing fast alternative to cd, inspired by
z and z.lua.
It keeps track of the directories you use most frequently, and uses a ranking algorithm
to navigate to the best match.
Examples
Getting started
Step 1: Installing zoxide
If you have Rust, this should be as simple as:
Otherwise, try the install script:
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If you want the interactive fuzzy selection feature, you will also need to install
fzf.
Step 2: Adding zoxide to your shell
If you currently use z, z.lua, or zsh-z, you may want to first import
your existing database into zoxide:
zsh
Add the following line to your ~/.zshrc:
bash
Add the following line to your ~/.bashrc:
fish
Add the following line to your ~/.config/fish/config.fish:
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POSIX
Add the following line to your shell's configuration file:
NOTE: If you modify your PS1 at any point, you may need to re-run the above command. This is due
to the fact that the hook is stored in PS1, in order to be evaluated every time the prompt is
displayed.
NOTE: PWD hooks are currently not supported for POSIX shells.
Configuration
init flags
--no-define-aliases: don't define extra aliases likezi,zq,za, andzr--hook <HOOK>: change the event that adds a new entry to the database (default:prompt)none: never add entries (this will makezoxideuseless unless you manually configure a hook)prompt: add an entry at every promptpwd: add an entry whenever you change directories
Environment variables
$_ZO_DATA_DIR: directory wherezoxidewill store its data files (default: platform-specific; see thedirsdocumentation for more information)$_ZO_ECHO:zwill print the matched directory before navigating to it$_ZO_EXCLUDE_DIRS: list of directories separated by platform-specific characters (":" on Linux and macOS, and ";" on Windows) to be excluded from the database$_ZO_MAXAGE: sets the maximum total rank after which entries start getting deleted