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vi-mode.plugin.zsh |
vi-mode plugin
This plugin increase vi-like
zsh functionality.
To use it, add vi-mode
to the plugins array in your zshrc file:
plugins=(... vi-mode)
Settings
-
VI_MODE_RESET_PROMPT_ON_MODE_CHANGE
: controls whether the prompt is redrawn when switching to a different input mode. If this is unset, the mode indicator will not be updated when changing to a different mode. Set it totrue
to enable it. For example:VI_MODE_RESET_PROMPT_ON_MODE_CHANGE=true
The default value is unset, unless
vi_mode_prompt_info
is used, in which case it'll automatically be set totrue
. -
VI_MODE_SET_CURSOR
: controls whether the cursor style is changed when switching to a different input mode. Set it totrue
to enable it (default: unset):VI_MODE_SET_CURSOR=true
-
MODE_INDICATOR
: controls the string displayed when the shell is in normal mode. See Mode indicator for details.
Mode indicator
Normal mode is indicated with a red <<<
mark at the right prompt, when it
hasn't been defined by theme.
You can change this indicator by setting the MODE_INDICATOR
variable. This setting
supports Prompt Expansion sequences. For example:
MODE_INDICATOR="%F{yellow}+%f"
You can also use the vi_mode_prompt_info
function in your prompt, which will display
this mode indicator.
Key bindings
Use ESC
or CTRL-[
to enter Normal mode
.
NOTE: some of these key bindings are set by zsh by default when using a vi-mode keymap.
History
ctrl-p
: Previous command in historyctrl-n
: Next command in history/
: Search backward in historyn
: Repeat the last/
Vim edition
vv
: Edit current command line in Vim
NOTE: this used to be bound to v
. That is now the default (visual-mode
).
Movement
$
: To the end of the line^
: To the first non-blank character of the line0
: To the first character of the linew
: [count] words forwardW
: [count] WORDS forwarde
: Forward to the end of word [count] inclusiveE
: Forward to the end of WORD [count] inclusiveb
: [count] words backwardB
: [count] WORDS backwardt{char}
: Till before [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the rightT{char}
: Till before [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the leftf{char}
: To [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the rightF{char}
: To [count]'th occurrence of {char} to the left;
: Repeat latest f, t, F or T [count] times,
: Repeat latest f, t, F or T in opposite direction
Insertion
i
: Insert text before the cursorI
: Insert text before the first character in the linea
: Append text after the cursorA
: Append text at the end of the lineo
: Insert new command line below the current oneO
: Insert new command line above the current one
Delete and Insert
ctrl-h
: While in Insert mode: delete character before the cursorctrl-w
: While in Insert mode: delete word before the cursord{motion}
: Delete text that {motion} moves overdd
: Delete lineD
: Delete characters under the cursor until the end of the linec{motion}
: Delete {motion} text and start insertcc
: Delete line and start insertC
: Delete to the end of the line and start insertr{char}
: Replace the character under the cursor with {char}R
: Enter replace mode: Each character replaces existing onex
: Deletecount
characters under and after the cursorX
: Deletecount
characters before the cursor
Known issues
Low $KEYTIMEOUT
A low $KEYTIMEOUT
value (< 15) means that key bindings that need multiple characters,
like vv
, will be very difficult to trigger. $KEYTIMEOUT
controls the number of
milliseconds that must pass before a key press is read and the appropriate key binding
is triggered. For multi-character key bindings, the key presses need to happen before
the timeout is reached, so on low timeouts the key press happens too slow, and therefore
another key binding is triggered.
We recommend either setting $KEYTIMEOUT
to a higher value, or remapping the key bindings
that you want to trigger to a keyboard sequence. For example:
bindkey -M vicmd 'V' edit-command-line # this remaps `vv` to `V` (but overrides `visual-mode`)