package main // Code generated .* DO NOT EDIT. import ( "strings" ) func configs() string { return strings.TrimSpace(`--- # The editor to use with 'cheat -e '. Defaults to $EDITOR or $VISUAL. editor: vim # Should 'cheat' always colorize output? colorize: true # Which 'chroma' colorscheme should be applied to the output? # Options are available here: # https://github.com/alecthomas/chroma/tree/master/styles style: monokai # Which 'chroma' "formatter" should be applied? # One of: "terminal", "terminal256", "terminal16m" formatter: terminal16m # The paths at which cheatsheets are available. Tags associated with a cheatpath # are automatically attached to all cheatsheets residing on that path. # # Whenever cheatsheets share the same title (like 'tar'), the most local # cheatsheets (those which come later in this file) take precedent over the # less local sheets. This allows you to create your own "overides" for # "upstream" cheatsheets. # # But what if you want to view the "upstream" cheatsheets instead of your own? # Cheatsheets may be filtered via 'cheat -t ' in combination with other # commands. So, if you want to view the 'tar' cheatsheet that is tagged as # 'community' rather than your own, you can use: cheat tar -t community cheatpaths: # Paths that come earlier are considered to be the most "global", and will # thus be overridden by more local cheatsheets. That being the case, you # should probably list community cheatsheets first. # # Note that the paths and tags listed below are just examples. You may freely # change them to suit your needs. - name: community path: ~/.dotfiles/cheat/community tags: [ community ] readonly: true # Maybe your company or department maintains a repository of cheatsheets as # well. It's probably sensible to list those second. - name: work path: ~/.dotfiles/cheat/work tags: [ work ] readonly: false # If you have personalized cheatsheets, list them last. They will take # precedence over the more global cheatsheets. - name: personal path: ~/.dotfiles/cheat/personal tags: [ personal ] readonly: false # While it requires no specific configuration here, it's also worth noting # that 'cheat' will automatically append directories named '.cheat' within # the current working directory to the 'cheatpath'. This can be very useful # if you'd like to closely associate cheatsheets with, for example, a # directory containing source code. # # Such "directory-scoped" cheatsheets will be treated as the most "local" # cheatsheets, and will override less "local" cheatsheets. Likewise, # directory-scoped cheatsheets will always be editable ('readonly: false'). `) }