It's Summer in the US, which means that it's really hot there's a new Terminal preview release!
Here's what's in it:
Why are there so many packages? How do I choose?This version of Windows Terminal is distributed in two bundles, one of which works on Windows 10-11 and the other of which only works on Windows 11. The Windows 11 version is much smaller because we no longer need to work around a platform issue related to our dependencies.
If you intend on using Terminal as an unpackaged application--that is, extracting the msix file--we recommend that
you use the Win10 bundle. You will need the Visual C++ runtime
redistributable.
In addition, if you install the packaged version on either Windows 10 or Windows 11, it now depends on the Visual C++ Universal Runtime Package.
Despite these distributions having different version numbers, they are built from the same code and there is no functional difference between them.
If you install the Windows 10 verison on Windows 11, it will probably automatically upgrade itself to the Windows 11 version. It turns out that it is impossible to have two bundles with the same version number, so it has to be this way.
Features
- Selecting text in the terminal just got better!
- Use the markMode action to enter mark mode and create a selection at the cursor (#13053) (#13358)
- This is bound to Ctrl+Shift+M by default. Be sure to try it out!
- Selections made with the keyboard now display a selection marker UI (#10865)
- Use the switchSelectionEndpoint action to switch which endpoint you are moving in a selection (#13370)
- Use the toggleBlockSelection action to transform your existing selection into a block selection (#13219)
- [Experimental] We now support scrollbar marks! (#12948) (#13163) (#13291) (#13414)
- Use the addMark action to add a scrollbar mark
- The color optional parameter can be used to specify a color
- Use the scrollToMark action with a specified direction parameter to scroll between the marks
- Use the clearMark action to remove a selected mark
- Use the clearAllMarks action to remove all scrollbar marks
- The experimental.autoMarkPrompts global setting can be set to true to automatically mark each prompt
- NOTE: This uses the FTCS_PROMPT sequence from FinalTerm, OSC 133 ; A, which we now support! (#13163)
- The experimental.showMarksOnScrollbar global setting can also be set to true to display the marks on your scrollbar
- If you're new to Windows Terminal Preview, but already have Windows Terminal installed and customized, we now migrate your settings over (#12907) (thanks @huiyooumich!)
- The tab's context menu now has "Find" as an option (#13055) (thanks @Predelnik!)
Changes
- "Open settings file" commands now explicitly mention "JSON" for easier searching (#13265)
- Color schemes now support "purple" and "magenta" interchangeably in the JSON (#13261) (thanks @matthewd673!)
- An accelerator key is now defined for the "Open in Terminal" shell extension (#13080) (thanks @ianjoneill!)
- The settings UI's "Save" pane now aligns with the "Open JSON file" footer (#13282) (thanks @HO-COOH!)
- The Default Terminal setting in settings UI now has a "Let Windows decide" option (#13160)
- An occasional crash while opening the settings UI has been stomped out (same PR!)
- The "Save" and "Discard changes" buttons were reordered in the settings UI to more closely follow the Windows UI guidelines (#13237)
- @dansmor7 has refined how colored tabs look when they're out of focus or hovered (#13434) (thanks!)
More Escape Sequences and expanded VT support
Courtesy of @j4james:
- Applications can now use DECCTR to alter the terminal's color scheme (#13139) (#13227)
- The same applications can now use DECAC to assign a color to the default foreground and background colors, as well as change the tab background color (#13058)
- Other applications can now use DECPS to play a basic sequence of musical notes (#13208)
- This feature is preview-only until we can make sure the MIDI sound font is available everywhere Stable ships.
Documentation
- building.md and mouseInput.cpp got cleaned up a bit (#13333) (thanks @ofek and @oferze!)
- We added a Gannt chart to the roadmap (#13234)
On the back end...
- @lhecker rewrote how we handle coordinates across the project, paving the way for a longer scrollback history and removing a bunch of sources of assertion failures; if you see anything weird that seems like a coordinate system issue, please file it! (#13025)
Bug Fixes
- We no longer suppress black blackground or gray foreground for PowerShell (#13352)
- We have chosen to remove this workaround as newer versions of PowerShell's PSReadline component contain a fix for the issue.
- This was a compatibility band-aid that was impacting the capabilities of great projects such as Oh My Posh.
- If you see unexpected black backgrounds appearing behind text while typing a command in PowerShell, make sure your PSReadline version is up to date. You can update your version of PSReadline by running the command, Update-Module PSReadline.
- The Default Terminal banner is now hidden if you opened a session via default terminal (#13344)
- AKA: We won't nag you to set Terminal as your default if it's demonstrably the default ;P
- [O is no longer output erroneously from focus events for clients of libuv like neovim (#13260)
- AtlasEngine no longer secretly increases the font size of HTML/RTF copies when the font changes (#13384)
- Keyboard selection is now limited to the scrollable area (#13318)
- The "Open in Terminal" shell extension is now hidden when accessing a non-filesystem path like "Quick Actions" (#13206) (thanks @leejy12!)
- Clearing the screen via cls or Clear-Host won't leave behind an erroneous line of text (#13324) (thanks @j4james!)
- Default Terminal sessions now properly pass focus events when opened (#13247)
- Terminal will now use Unicode 14.0 to determine the width of some Unicode characters (#13292)
- We will no longer try to launch wsl to ask it to tell us about distributions when it's obvious that you don't have any (#13436)
- We've fixed a minor race condition in default terminal handoff that impacted nobody (#13410)
Reliability
- We no longer crash when a screen reader is reading from a CLI app using the alt buffer (#13250) (#13244)
- Deleting the last profile in the settings UI no longer causes a crash (#13242)
- Opening Windows Terminal via the Win+X menu no longer occasionally crashes (#13212)
- SetConsoleWindowInfo can no longer crash a terminal tab (#13212)
Source:
Release Windows Terminal Preview v1.15.186 · microsoft/terminal
It's Summer in the US, which means that it's really hot there's a new Terminal preview release! Here's what's in it: Why are there so many packages? How do I choose? This version of Windows Termin...
github.com
Windows Terminal Preview 1.15 Release
Welcome back to another Windows Terminal release! This release updates Windows Terminal to version 1.14 and includes all of the features from this previous blog post. Additionally, Windows Terminal Preview is getting an update to version 1.15 and will include all the features detailed here.
devblogs.microsoft.com
Windows Terminal Preview - Free download and install on Windows | Microsoft Store
This is the preview build of the Windows Terminal, which contains the latest features as they are developed. The Windows Terminal is a modern, fast, efficient, powerful, and productive terminal application for users of command-line tools and shells like Command Prompt, PowerShell, and WSL. Its...
apps.microsoft.com
Last edited: