# Use A Space To Exclude Command From History When using a shell like `zsh`, you get the benefit of it keeping track of the history of the commands you've entered into the shell. This means you can quickly traverse pack to a previous command that you want to run again. It also means [a tool like `fzf` can hook into your history file](https://github.com/junegunn/fzf?tab=readme-ov-file#key-bindings-for-command-line) so that you can fuzzy-search for a command you may have executed weeks ago. The history is stored on your machine in a plaintext file. Not every command should be stored in a plaintext file. For instance, you don't want `zsh` to persist a command that includes a password. With the `histignorespace` option enabled in `zsh`, we can put a leading space in front of our command and it will be excluded from the history file. Try it yourself: ```bash $ echo 'this command will be remembered' this command will be remembered $ echo 'this command will be forgotten' this command will be forgotten ``` Notice the leading space in the second command. Trying pressing your _up_ arrow and notice only that first `echo` is remembered. Make sure `histignorespace` is included in the list when you run `setopt`. If it isn't, then add it: ```bash $ setopt histignorespace ``` [source](https://stackoverflow.com/questions/8473121/execute-a-command-without-keeping-it-in-history/49643320#49643320)