Windows Terminal Preview 1.2.
Focus mode
There is a new feature called focus mode that hides the tabs and title bar. This mode will only display the terminal content. To enable focus mode, you can add a key binding for toggleFocusMode
in your settings.json file.
This command is not bound by default.
{ "command": "toggleFocusMode", "keys": "shift+f11" }
Always on top mode
In addition to focus mode, you can enable Windows Terminal Preview to always be the topmost window. This can be done with the alwaysOnTop
global setting as well as a key binding using the toggleAlwaysOnTop
command.
These are not bound by default.
// Global setting
"alwaysOnTop": true
// Key binding
{ "command": "toggleAlwaysOnTop", "keys": "alt+shift+tab" }
New commands
New key binding commands have been added to give you more flexibility when interacting with your terminal.
Set tab color
You can set the color of your focused tab with the setTabColor
command. This command uses the color
property to define which color you’d like, which accepts a color in hex format, i.e. #rgb or #rrggbb.
This command is not bound by default.
{ "command": { "action": "setTabColor", "color": "#ffffff" }, "keys": "ctrl+a" }
Open tab color picker
A new command has been added that allows you to open the tab color picker menu. This can be done with the openTabColorPicker
command. If you want to color a tab with your mouse, you can right click on the tab to access the color picker.
This command is not bound by default.
{ "command": "openTabColorPicker", "keys": "ctrl+b" }
Rename tab
You can rename the focused tab with the renameTab
command. You can also right click or double click on the tab to rename it.
This command is not bound by default.
{ "command": "renameTab", "keys": "ctrl+c" }
Toggle retro terminal effects
You can toggle the retro terminal effects that add scanlines and a glow to the text with the toggleRetroEffect
command. This enables the experimental.retroTerminalEffect
profile setting.
This command is not bound by default.
{ "command": "toggleRetroEffect", "keys": "ctrl+d" }
Cascadia Code font weights
Cascadia Code now has font weights! You can enable these font weights in Windows Terminal Preview by using the fontWeight
profile setting. A huge shoutout goes to our font designer Aaron Bell for making this happen!
"fontWeight": "light"
Command palette update
The command palette is almost complete! We are currently ironing out a few more bugs, but if you’d like to play with it, you can add the commandPalette
command to your key bindings and invoke it using your keyboard. If you find any bugs, please file them on the GitHub repo!
This command is not bound by default.
{ "command": "commandPalette", "keys": "ctrl+shift+p" }
Settings UI design
We have been actively working on the settings UI and have narrowed down on a design. The design is pictured below and the spec can be found here. We appreciate all feedback and we’ll be starting implementation very soon!
Miscellaneous
⭐ You can now use nt
, sp
, şi ft
as command line arguments for new tab, split pane, and focus tab, respectively.
⭐ We now have proper logos for high contrast mode.
⭐ There are now warnings for pasting large amounts of text and text with multiple lines. More information on disabling these warnings can be found on the global settings docs page.
Bug fixes
- You can now run
wt
as an Administrator from the Run dialog with Ctrl+Shift+Enter. - Printing large amounts of text in WSL is 20% faster!
- The terminal will no longer scroll to the bottom when there is output if you are scrolled up or have a selection.
- The pseudoconsole will now forward colors and styles emitted by applications with higher fidelity, thus greatly improving color representation.
Note: If you’re seeing unexpected black bars when you use PowerShell, visit the troubleshooting page on our docs site.