Vim - how to remap "jump to next/previous paragraph" - vim

In vim you can use { and } to jump between paragraphs.
Can someone help me change those keybingings? I'm trying to make them Alt-Down and Alt-Up respectively.
I've tried this so far:
map <ALT-DOWN> <S-{>
map <ALT-DOWN> <S-[>
map <ALT-DOWN> {
but no luck.
I'd like the shortcut to work in all vim modes, including edit mode.

Taken from comments by #mattb above, the solution that (partially) worked is:
#all modes except insert
map <M-DOWN> <S-}>
map <M-UP> <S-{>
#insert mode
imap <M-UP> <esc><S-{>i
imap <M-DOWN> <esc><S-}>i
Note this on neovim, not vim.
PS credit for above is Matt's. Relevant links supplied:
Why alt key mapping not working in vim? but it works in neovim
How to map Alt key?

Related

VIM: set term=xterm changes <BS> to <Del>, is it reversible?

I have added set term=xterm to my vimrc to be able to use 256-color vim schemes in terminal, but it comes at a price (at least for me). It also replaces (sort of) the BackSpace with Delete (i.e. BackSpace starts to delete forward just like Delete does) in insert mode and makes it "BackSpace" instead of moving left (or h) in normal mode. I have nothing against Ctrl-H as a way "to Backspace", but I simply don't want to have two delete buttons and ability "to BackSpace" (delete backward) in normal mode.
How can I reverse that change while retaining the setting I need?
PS I've read :h CTRL-h and a bit of :h xterm, but I couldn't find the solution.
Vim's inoremap and nnoremap commands can be used to adjust how keys are interpreted in Vim.
A solution is documented here for your specific context: https://conemu.github.io/en/VimXterm.html
The relevant quote:
"If you have problems with BS in Vim (BS acts like Delete key) under ConEmu when term=xterm, you may try to remap BS key:
inoremap <Char-0x07F> <BS>
nnoremap <Char-0x07F> <BS>
"
In general, when a key does not do what you want, the trick is to find out what it actually sends to Vim. Sometimes hitting Ctrl-V followed by that key in insert mode might help figure it out. Then inoremap and nnoremap as shown above can be used to reassign it to the behaviour you want in insert and normal modes, respectively.

Can't map function keys with shift in Vim [duplicate]

I am trying to customize the behaviour of Enter key in Normal mode in Vim.
Here is my .vimrc:
nmap <CR> o<Esc>
nmap <S-CR> i<CR><Esc>
I am trying to make Enter simply append a newline after the current line when pressed. However, when the Shift-Enter combination is pressed, I want to break the current line at the cursor.
The latter does not work. Whenever I press Shift-Enter it just appends a line without breaking it at the cursor.
I managed to correct my terminal key-code for Shift+Enter
by sending the key-code Vim apparently expects. Depending on your terminal,
(Adding Ctrl+Enter as a bonus!)
iTerm2
For a single Profile open Preferences → Profiles → Keys → [+] (Add)
For all profiles open Preferences →
Keys → [+] (Add)
Keyboard shortcut: (Hit Shift+Enter)
Action: Send Escape Sequence
Esc+ [13;2u
Repeat for Ctrl+Enter, with sequence: [13;5u
urxvt, append to your .Xresources file:
URxvt.keysym.S-Return: \033[13;2u
URxvt.keysym.C-Return: \033[13;5u
Alacritty, under key_bindings, add following to your ~/.config/alacritty/alacritty.yml:
- { key: Return, mods: Shift, chars: "\x1b[13;2u" }
- { key: Return, mods: Control, chars: "\x1b[13;5u" }
Kitty, in ~/.config/kitty/kitty.conf:
map shift+enter send_text all \x1b[13;2u
map ctrl+enter send_text all \x1b[13;5u
Due to the way that the keyboard input is handled internally, this unfortunately isn't generally possible today in the terminal version of Vim (<S-CR> should work in GVIM on all platforms, and in the Windows console Vim). This is a known pain point, and the subject of various discussions on vim_dev and the #vim IRC channel.
Some people (foremost Paul LeoNerd Evans) want to fix that (even for console Vim in terminals that support this), and have floated various proposals, cp. http://groups.google.com/group/vim_dev/browse_thread/thread/626e83fa4588b32a/bfbcb22f37a8a1f8
But as of today, no patches or volunteers have yet come forward, though many have expressed a desire to have this in a future Vim 8 major release.
Note on mapping <CR>:
If you map <CR> in normal mode, it'll interfere with selection of history items in the command-line window and with jumping to error under cursor in quickfix/location list windows! (Unless you add the following:)
:autocmd CmdwinEnter * nnoremap <CR> <CR>
:autocmd BufReadPost quickfix nnoremap <CR> <CR>
Note on :nmap:
You should use :noremap; it makes the mapping immune to remapping and recursion.
I also wanted to map <S-CR> and found that I couldn't get it to work in CLI mode until I added a second mapping using Ctrl+V then <Shift+Enter> for the mapped keystroke. The <S-CR> mapping is still needed for GVIm to work as expected, however. This would render the your .vimrc snippet as follows:
nnoremap <CR> o<Esc>
nnoremap <S-CR> i<CR><Esc> " Needed for GVIm
nnoremap ^[0M i<CR><Esc> " Needed for CLI VIm (Note: ^[0M was created with Ctrl+V Shift+Enter, don't type it directly)
I tested this on Ubuntu 12.04. Happy Vimming!
You can't map <S-CR> in CLI Vim, no matter how hard you try, because Vim can't distinguish <S-CR> from <CR>.
You must find another mapping or stick with GVim/MacVim.
edit
Some terminal emulators, like iTerm.app or Terminal.app on Mac OS X, allow you to set up shortcuts to send specific characters sequences to the shell. If you have that possibility it may be worth a try but you'll quickly get used to a platform-specific gyzmo that can't be ported so, well… I don't really recommend it.
Ingo Karkat and romainl are 100% correct. However what you are asking is common so I want to give you some options.
I personally recommend using Tim Pope's Unimpaired plugin. It provides many mappings but the ones you will looking for are [<space> and ]<space> which create blank lines above and below the current line respectively. Unimpaired also provides nice mappings for moving through the quickfix list, buffer list, option toggling, and many others. See :h unimpaired for more.
If you do not want to use unimpaired plugin but like the mappings below are some quick mappings to put in your ~/.vimrc file:
nnoremap <silent> [<space> :<c-u>put!=repeat([''],v:count)<bar>']+1<cr>
nnoremap <silent> ]<space> :<c-u>put =repeat([''],v:count)<bar>'[-1<cr>

Tab Navigation mapping is not working

NOTE: I am using Terminator instead of terminal. But as all other mappings are working fine why does these are not working.
I have tried to use these mappings in my vimrc file to be able to use Tab Navigation. But its not working at all.
nnoremap <C-S-tab> :tabprevious<CR>
"nnoremap <C-tab> :tabnext<CR>
nnoremap <C-tab> :tabn<CR> "I also tried this
nnoremap <C-t> :tabnew<CR>
inoremap <C-S-tab> <Esc>:tabprevious<CR>i
inoremap <C-tab> <Esc>:tabnext<CR>i
inoremap <C-t> <Esc>:tabnew<CR>
inoremap <C-S-w> <Esc>:tabclose<CR>
"Also to go to the nth tabpage Use <A-Fn>
nnoremap <A-F1> 1gt
nnoremap <A-F2> 2gt
nnoremap <A-F3> 3gt
nnoremap <A-F4> 4gt
nnoremap <A-F5> 5gt
nnoremap <A-F6> 6gt
nnoremap <A-F7> 7gt
nnoremap <A-F8> 8gt
nnoremap <A-F9> 9gt
nnoremap <A-F10> 10gt
NOTE: I have ctags and cscope installed. So I think there might be some confliction as ctrl-t is to jump back from a certain tag. And only this mapping is working for new tab.
Also I have checked ctrl-PageDown is working fine for the same purpose.
2nd Question:
How does this key notation works in vimrc.
Is it something like this:
All modifier keys should be used in Caps like
C for Ctrl.
A for Alt.
S for Shift.
And other keys are all in small.
But what about keys like:
Home
End
Backspace
Escape
PageUp
PageDown
Tab
Function keys etc.
How to use them?
Here
I read that how these should be used in mapping but even they have used tab instead of Tab in mappings.
Brace yourself for disappointment.
The terminal keycodes
Vim accepts terminal keycodes, so not all key combinations are possible. The best way to figure out which keys are recognizable is to open insert mode and press ctrl+v followed by your key combination. This will show you the raw codes. Do this for another key combination. If the raw codes are the same then Vim can not distinguish between them. e.g. ctrl+v ctrl+shift+tab.
Your mappings
You should probably avoid doing insert mode mappings to switch tabs. It simply isn't the Vim Way as insert mode should only be used in short bursts.
Your :tabprev and :tabnext mappings can simplified into gT and gt mappings. Personally I do not mind the default gt or gT mappings.
<key> notation
As far as I know the case does not matter. All my mappings are lowercase. For a list of <> notation please see :h key-notation.
You are correct on the <c-..> for control, <a-...> for alt, and <s-...> for shift. Example combination would be <c-s-space>. Note: most <c-s-...> mappings are going to fail.
Using Tabs
Vim's tabs are not like most text editors tab. They are more like viewports into a group of windows/splits. Additionally, Vim is buffer centric, not tab centric like most editors. For example using features like Vim's quickfix list is often easier without tabs (See :h 'switchbuf if you must use tabs). Vim's tabs often get in the way of using a splits as there are better window and buffer navigation commands available. I personally have many files open (sometimes 100+) using no tabs and use on average 1-2 splits without any issue.
Bottom line: Learn to use buffers effectively.
Conclusion
I would suggest you break this tab workflow quickly and learn to love buffers. You won't really need your mappings and you will not be working against Vim's nature.
Read :help key-notation for an explanation of… Vim's key notation.
It is generally a good idea to play it safe so I recommend to follow these conventions when mapping combos:
always use an uppercase letter for the modifier key, C for Control, S for Shift, A for Alt, D for Command (MacVim GUI only), M for Meta,
always use a lowercase letter for the alphabetical keys, abc…xyz,
always capitalize the first letter of "special" keys, Tab, Space, Up, etc.
Examples:
<S-Up>
<C-r>
<A-LeftMouse>
However, the following notation works just as well so… whatever notation you choose, try to be consistent:
<s-UP>
Using multiple modifiers in a single mapping doesn't work reliably so you will be better in the long run if you completely avoid them.
nnoremap <C-S-j> :echo "csj"<CR>
nnoremap <C-j> :echo "cj"<CR>
now press <C-j> and <C-S-j> in normal mode.
<C-S-w> is indistinguishable from <C-w>.
:verbose map <C-t>
shows you what is mapped to <C-t> and where the mapping occurred. You can use it to debug your mappings.
And I agree with Peter, you are using both tab pages and insert mode wrongly.

Invoke NERDCommenter in insert mode?

In my .vimrc, I have the following mapping which I use to toggle comments using the excellent NERDCommenter plugin:
vmap <D-/> ,c<space>gv
map <D-/> ,c<space>
Works great for this TextMate refugee.
However, I'd like it to work in Insert mode as well. Roughly:
Use the same combo (command-/)
Switch to normal mode
Execute the toggle
Bonus points for saving the cursor position, I suppose.
My .vimrc skills don't extend to this. Any help?
Use imap to map commands in insert mode. I think the following should work.
imap <D-/> <esc>,c<space>

Vim: Del in Insert Mode

Is there any key combination that simulate the Del in Vim insert mode? For the Backspace, there is the Ctrl-H which is very convenient, and make it easier than pushing the far away Backspace button.
Take a look at http://vimdoc.sourceforge.net/htmldoc/insert.html There are a few more built-in key combinations for various tasks.
Also you can set your own mappings using .vimrc for example your given example is just
imap ^H <Left><Del>
On my vim installation, Del in insert mode Just Works. :help i_<Del>
If Del isn't doing what you want, you can try :fixdel. :help :fixdel has a good explanation of what that tries to fix.
If you simply wanted to simulate Del via another Ctrl-key mapping (e.g. Ctrl-D), I'd recommend the following mapping:
imap <C-D> <C-O>x
Ctrl-O in insert mode will allow you to run a single normal mode command and automatically return back to insert mode. x deletes the key under the cursor.
You can map keys yourself in vim, including insert mode. The following article reveals more details:
Mapping keys in VIM

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