Working with mise
Overview
mise is a polyglot tool version manager. Use this skill when:
- •Adding tools to a project via mise
- •Troubleshooting "command not found" when mise should have tools available
- •Deciding whether mise is the right choice for a dependency
The Iron Rules
- •Use
mise useto add tools - never manually edit config files - •Detect existing config files first - don't create new ones when one exists
- •Fix the shell, don't workaround - if tools aren't on PATH, diagnose the activation issue rather than using
mise execas a permanent workaround
When to Use mise vs Alternatives
Use mise when version matters per-project
Tools where different projects need different versions:
- •Language runtimes: node, python, ruby, go, rust
- •Infrastructure tools: terraform, kubectl, helm
- •Tools with breaking changes between versions
# Good mise candidates - version sensitivity mise use node@20 # Projects may need different Node versions mise use terraform@1.5 # IaC often pins specific versions mise use ruby@3.2 # Gemfiles often require specific Ruby
Use Homebrew/system when version rarely matters
Stable CLIs with consistent interfaces across versions:
- •jq, yq - query languages are stable
- •gh, hub - GitHub CLI
- •ripgrep, fd - search tools
- •tree, htop - system utilities
# Better as Homebrew - version doesn't matter brew install jq gh ripgrep
Decision checklist
Ask yourself:
- •Does this project's README/docs specify a version? → mise
- •Could different team members need different versions? → mise
- •Does the tool have breaking changes between versions? → mise
- •Is it a stable CLI you use the same way everywhere? → Homebrew
Adding Tools with mise
1. Check for existing config files first
Before adding tools, detect what config format the project uses:
# Check for existing mise config ls -la mise.toml .mise.toml .mise.local.toml .tool-versions 2>/dev/null
Config file precedence (mise uses the first it finds):
- •
mise.tomlor.mise.toml- standard mise config - •
.mise.local.toml- local overrides (usually gitignored) - •
.tool-versions- legacy asdf format
If a config file exists, use that format. Don't create a new one.
2. Use mise use to add tools
Always use the CLI - it validates the tool exists and works:
# Add to project config (mise.toml or existing format) mise use node@20 # Add to global config (~/.config/mise/config.toml) mise use -g python@3.12 # Dry run to see what would happen mise use --dry-run terraform@1.5
Never manually edit config files - mise use ensures:
- •The tool/version exists in the registry
- •The tool installs correctly
- •The config syntax is valid
3. Verify the tool is available
# Check mise sees the tool mise ls # Check the tool is on PATH which node node --version # Compare with mise's view mise which node
Troubleshooting "Command Not Found"
When a tool should be available but isn't found:
Diagnostic workflow
# 1. Check mise installation health mise doctor # 2. Check what tools mise knows about mise ls # All installed tools mise ls --current # Tools for current directory # 3. Compare which vs mise which which node # What shell finds mise which node # What mise thinks it should be # 4. Check if tool would work via mise exec mise exec -- node --version # If this works, it's an activation issue
Common causes and fixes
Shell activation not set up
Symptom: mise exec -- node works, but node doesn't
Diagnose:
mise doctor # Look for activation warnings
Fix - add to shell rc file:
# For zsh (~/.zshrc) eval "$(mise activate zsh)" # For bash (~/.bashrc) eval "$(mise activate bash)" # For fish (~/.config/fish/config.fish) mise activate fish | source
Then restart your shell or source the rc file.
Config file not trusted
Symptom: mise shows trust warning, tools not activated
Fix:
mise trust
Tool not installed for current directory
Symptom: mise ls shows tool globally but not in mise ls --current
Diagnose:
# Check what config file applies mise config # Check if there's a local config overriding global cat mise.toml .mise.toml .tool-versions 2>/dev/null
Fix: Add the tool to the project config:
mise use node@20 # Adds to project config
Shims vs PATH activation confusion
Symptom: Tools work in terminal but not in IDE/scripts
See @references/dev-tools/shims-html.md for detailed explanation.
Quick fix for non-interactive contexts:
# In ~/.zprofile or ~/.bash_profile (non-interactive) eval "$(mise activate zsh --shims)" # In ~/.zshrc or ~/.bashrc (interactive) eval "$(mise activate zsh)"
When to use mise exec (legitimately)
mise exec is appropriate for:
- •One-off commands with specific versions:
mise exec node@18 -- npm test - •CI/CD scripts where activation isn't available
- •Testing a different version temporarily
mise exec is NOT a fix for:
- •Tools not being on PATH in your terminal (fix activation instead)
- •"It works with mise exec" as a permanent solution
Validation Commands
After configuration changes, verify everything works:
# Full health check mise doctor # Verify specific tool mise which node && node --version # Verify PATH includes mise tools echo $PATH | tr ':' '\n' | grep mise
Available References
- •
@references/cli/use-html.md- Fullmise usedocumentation - •
@references/cli/doctor-html.md- Diagnostic commands - •
@references/cli/activate-html.md- Shell activation - •
@references/cli/which-html.md- Path resolution - •
@references/dev-tools/shims-html.md- Shims vs PATH activation - •
@references/guides/getting-started.md- Setup guide
Red Flags - You're About to Violate
- •"Let me just add this to mise.toml manually" → Use
mise useinstead - •"I'll use mise exec as a workaround" → Diagnose why activation isn't working
- •"Let me create a .mise.toml" → Check if config already exists first
- •Adding jq/gh/ripgrep to mise → Consider if version actually matters
- •Assuming mise is activated → Run
mise doctorto verify