This guide will help you setup a software development environment on Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks and above. By the end, your computer will be configured with the same state-of-the-art tools used by professional software developers.
This guide is mostly compatible with older versions of Mac OS X. So follow along as best you can while Googling any problems you come across.
Included in Mac OS X is the Terminal—an app that runs a Unix shell.
A Unix shell is a command line user interface between you and your computer's operating system. You're probably most familiar with the graphical user interface of your computer's operating system. While that's technically a shell too, most programmers think of the textual, command line interface when they hear to word shell.
Let's get our hands dirty and have some fun. First, use Spotlight to launch the Terminal app.
Once launched, you'll see something like this.
Here's a quick break down of what you're seeing in the Terminal app.
Component | Description |
---|---|
Wed Jan 28 08:12:49 |
Date of your last login |
ttys003 |
Name of your last terminal session |
photon |
Name of your computer |
~ (home directory) |
Name of your working directory |
ryansobol |
Name of your user account |
$ |
Prompt symbol |
Any characters you type will appear after the $
prompt symbol. Go ahead and type uname
. After pressing the Enter key, you'll see something like this.
Here's what happened:
- The shell waited for you to type a command.
- You then typed the word
uname
which appeared after the prompt. - You pressed the Enter key which triggered the shell to accept your input.
- The shell searched for a program called
uname
. - Once found, the shell launched the
uname
program and handed it control over the Terminal. - While running, the
uname
program told the Terminal to display the wordDarwin
. - Once finished, the
uname
program exited and handed control of the Terminal back to the shell. - The shell told the Terminal to display another prompt.
- Once displayed, the shell began waiting for your next command.
Simply stated, a Unix shell works like a read-evaluate-print loop or REPL.
The default profile for the Terminal uses small, black text on a white background. Boring! Let's change that.
- Download the Tomorrow Night Eighties terminal profile by holding the Option key and left-clicking the link.
- Navigate to the
Downloads
folder. - Install the profile by double-clicking the file.
- You may see an alert explaining the file "cannot be opened because it is from an unidentified developer".
- If so, launch the System Preferences app, navigate to
Security & Privacy > General
, and then click on theOpen Anyway
button. - Back in the Terminal app, navigate to the
Terminal > Preferences
menu item. - In the preferences window, click the
Settings
Pane. - On the left side, scroll to the bottom, select the
Tommorrow Night Eighties
profile, and click theDefault
button. - Finally, quit and relaunch the Terminal.
Now, every new Terminal window will look like this.