
Screenshot of a zsh session |
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| Developed by | Peter Stephenson, et al. |
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| Latest release | 4.2.7 / December 18, 2007 |
| Preview release | 4.3.9 / November 3, 2008 |
| OS | Various |
| Type | Unix shell |
| License | BSD-style license |
| Website | http://www.zsh.org |
The Z shell (zsh) is a Unix shell that can be used as an interactive login shell and as a powerful command interpreter for shell scripting. Zsh can be thought of as an extended bourne shell with a large number of improvements, including some of the most useful features of bash, ksh, and tcsh.
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The first version of zsh was written by Paul Falstad in 1990 when he was a student at Princeton University.
The name zsh derives from Yale professor Zhong Shao, then a teaching assistant at Princeton University. Paul Falstad thought that Shao's login name, "zsh", was a good name for a shell.
Features of note include:
/bin/shAttesting to the sheer size of this shell is the famous first sentence of the shell's manual page, which reads "Because zsh contains many features, the zsh manual has been split into a number of sections", and then goes on to list seventeen items.
zsh at the Open Directory Project
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