Hi,
For xterm*, you might be able to try these instead of a mapping that starts with <Esc>, since that can sometimes lead to messing with timeouts and/or having a delay when pressing <Esc> to leave insert mode etc.
exec "set <xHome>=\e[1;*H"
exec "set <xEnd>=\e[1;*F"
exec "set <xUp>=\e[1;*A"
exec "set <xDown>=\e[1;*B"
exec "set <xRight>=\e[1;*C"
exec "set <xLeft>=\e[1;*D"
exec "set <xEnd>=\e[1;*F"
exec "set <xUp>=\e[1;*A"
exec "set <xDown>=\e[1;*B"
exec "set <xRight>=\e[1;*C"
exec "set <xLeft>=\e[1;*D"
thx,
-m
On Wednesday, October 27, 2021 at 4:20:03 PM UTC-4 Gary Johnson wrote:
On 2021-10-27, Julio Guerrero wrote:
> Hi Gary, I have applied those changes in my vimrc but the problem remains,
> after I ran the verbose command maps are pointing to my vimrc (same lines I
> added). I'm sorry I did not know this is the dev repo, will move my question to
> the other repo.
>
> Hi lacygoill, as per your questions:
>
> • $TERM: screen-256color
> • E846: Key code not set:
> • Ctrl-V then Ctrl-Right, delete lines
> • I use tmux
> • TERM out multiplexer: same as inside VIM - screen-256color
I'm using a different terminal now than I was this morning. Running
vim within tmux, I now see the problem.
In insert mode Ctrl-V Ctrl-Left inserts:
^[[1;5D
Ctrl-V Ctrl-Right inserts:
^[[1;5C
See
:help i_CTRL-V
Pressing Ctrl-Left in either normal or insert modes deletes the next
5 lines. Pressing Ctrl-Right also deletes 5 lines but goes to
insert mode.
That makes sense. Vim doesn't recognize those escape sequences so
it processes them as normal keystrokes. In normal mode, Vim ignores
that first <Esc> (^[). In insert mode, that first <Esc> puts Vim
into normal mode. Vim does not recognize the sequence [1 and
appears to ignore it. The ; will repeat the latest f, t, F or
T command. That may or may not move the cursor and affect the next
command. 5D deletes 5 lines. 5C deletes from the cursor to the end
of the line 4 more lines and starts insert mode.
I don't know the right solution at the moment, but a workaround
would be to put this in your vimrc.
if &term == "screen-256color"
nnoremap <Esc>[1;5C <C-Right>
nnoremap <Esc>[1;5D <C-Left>
inoremap <Esc>[1;5C <C-Right>
inoremap <Esc>[1;5D <C-Left>
endif
Regards,
Gary
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