Your fingers will thank you the first time you type ll instead of ls -la . Do you use a .bashrc on Windows? Share your favorite alias in the comments.
# ~/.bashrc for Windows alias ll='ls -la' alias ..='cd ..' alias c='clear' Open current folder in File Explorer alias explore='start .' Open a file with default Windows app alias open='start ""' Git shortcuts alias gs='git status' alias ga='git add .' alias gc='git commit -m' alias gp='git push' Python on Windows (if using regular Python, not WSL) alias py='winpty python' Custom prompt (shows Git branch if in a repo) parse_git_branch() git branch 2> /dev/null export PS1="\u@\h \w[\033[32m]$(parse_git_branch)[\033[00m] $ " Reload Without Reopening the Terminal After editing .bashrc , run: windows bashrc
If you’ve just moved from macOS or Linux to Windows (or you’re dual-booting), one of the first things you’ll miss is your trusty .bashrc . That one file where you store aliases, custom prompts, and environment variables. Your fingers will thank you the first time