Bat is an useful tool for viewing plain text files in the terminal.
The official repository can be found here. This repository serves as a easy-to-do tutorial for setting up bat.
Install Visual C++ Redistributable first.
Then there are many package managers that can be used to install bat on Windows, such as scoop
, chocolatey
, winget
, etc.
At the same time, installation via binary files is also supported. See Release.
scoop install bat
scoop install less
choco install bat
winget install sharkdp.bat
winget install JohnTaylor.less
winget install JohnTaylor.lesskey
brew install bat
port install bat
sudo apt install bat
If you install bat this way, please note that the executable may be installed as batcat
instead of bat
(due to a name clash with another package). You can set up a bat -> batcat
symlink or alias to prevent any issues that may come up because of this and to be consistent with other distributions:
mkdir -p ~/.local/bin
ln -s /usr/bin/batcat ~/.local/bin/bat
Bat can also be installed using .deb
files, see official repository for more information.
sudo apk add bat
sudo pacman -S bat
Other distributions please refer to the official repository.
The configuration file's location can be called using bat --config-file
. A default configuration file can be generated using bat --generate-config-file
.
Run bat --help
to see all the available options.
For Windows users, some features need extra configuration. See official repository if errors occur.
This repo contains sample config file for bat.
git clone https://github.com/Hydraallen/bat.git ~/.config/bat
bat filename
You can use the -A
/--show-all
option to show and highlight non-printable characters.