urxvt is a great terminal emulator, but spending time on a mac made me miss the ability (in iTerm!) to dynamically resize text using ⌘+Plus and ⌘+Minus. I was also thinking that it would be be nice if resizing the terminal font could be persisted to Xresources
. Turns out this was pretty easy to accomplish.
urxvt.perl-lib: /path/to/urxvt-font
urxvt.keysym.Control-Shift-Up: perl:font:increment
urxvt.keysym.Control-Shift-Down: perl:font:decrement
urxvt.perl-ext-common: font
Now, Ctrl+Shift+<Up>
and Ctrl+Shift+<Down>
will, respectively, enlarge and decrease the text size in a running urxvt window, and save the new font size to ~/.Xresources
, so that it’s there for the next time you open a terminal window. With the Monaco font, it’s a poor man’s iTerm.
I keep my fonts in a separate xresources file, which gets include by ~/.Xresources
. This way I can version ~/.Xdefaults
without dirtying the repository every time I change the terminal font size. For this to work, the path defined by X_RESOURCES
in font
must contain something like this:
/* Fonts */
urxvt*boldColors: on
urxvt*font: xft:Monaco:pixelsize=20:antialias=true:hinting=true:medium
urxvt*boldFont: xft:Monaco:pixelsize=20:antialias=true:hinting=true:bold
! vim:ft=xdefaults