CLI: Support tilde (~) shortcut to user profile in -d argument #10369

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opened 2026-01-31 02:19:44 +00:00 by claunia · 0 comments
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Originally created by @Ariane-B on GitHub (Aug 28, 2020).

Description of the new feature/enhancement

Currently, if I want to open a Terminal tab that starts in a specific folder in my user profile, I have to write -d C:\Users\MyUser\somefolder. I wish I could use the shortcut ~ to say "that's my user folder".

Proposed technical implementation details (optional)

For example, I could use the command wt -d ~/somefolder, which would be equivalent to wt -d C:\Users\MyUser\somefolder.

Originally created by @Ariane-B on GitHub (Aug 28, 2020). <!-- 🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨 I ACKNOWLEDGE THE FOLLOWING BEFORE PROCEEDING: 1. If I delete this entire template and go my own path, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement. 2. If I list multiple bugs/concerns in this one issue, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement. 3. If I write an issue that has many duplicates, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement (and without necessarily spending time to find the exact duplicate ID number). 4. If I leave the title incomplete when filing the issue, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement. 5. If I file something completely blank in the body, the core team may close my issue without further explanation or engagement. All good? Then proceed! --> # Description of the new feature/enhancement Currently, if I want to open a Terminal tab that starts in a specific folder in my user profile, I have to write `-d C:\Users\MyUser\somefolder`. I wish I could use the shortcut ~ to say "that's my user folder". <!-- A clear and concise description of what the problem is that the new feature would solve. Describe why and how a user would use this new functionality (if applicable). --> # Proposed technical implementation details (optional) <!-- A clear and concise description of what you want to happen. --> For example, I could use the command `wt -d ~/somefolder`, which would be equivalent to `wt -d C:\Users\MyUser\somefolder`.
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Reference: starred/terminal#10369