Customizing Warp
Learn some of the ways you can customize Warp's appearance and behavior.
Customizing Warp's appearance
Warp has many Appearance settings you can configure:
Themes: You can choose from pre-loaded themes or create your own custom theme, using .yaml or based on a background image you upload.
Input format: Choose between Warp's Standard input or Classic input. Standard enables easier access to AI features, while Classic resembles a traditional terminal input more closely.
Text and fonts: You can customize your font type and font size. You can also adjust the font to improve readability and accessibility.
Input position: Set your prompt and command line to the top or bottom of your Warp window.
Navigate to Settings > Appearance
to customize your setup.

Modify behavior settings
There are a number of behavior settings and features that will help you customize Warp to best suit your needs:
Dedicated window: Dedicated hotkey window (also known as Quake Mode) allows you to customize your window's position, width, and height ratio relative to your active screen size.
Tabs: Organize your windows into multiple sessions, and customize them with different titles and/or colors.
Split panes: Divide any tab into multiple panels, side-by-side or stacked.

Auto suggestions: As you type, Warp will automatically suggest commands based on shell history and possible completions.
Completions: When you press TAB, Warp will suggest commands, option names, and path parameters for you. Customize your TAB key behavior under
Settings > Features
.Vim keybindings: Warp supports default Vim keybindings, allowing for keyboard-driven text editing.
Keyboard shortcuts: Warp supports commonly used keyboard shortcuts. You can also set custom keyboard shortcuts by creating new commands or editing existing shortcuts.
Open files and links: Using your cursor, you can open files, folders, and URL links that are within Blocks. You can also configure the default editor to open files.
Command Corrections: Get auto-correct suggestions on commands to catch typos, forgotten flags, and general console errors.
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