In cash, C-a is beginning-of-line. C-b is backward-char.
By default, if the tmux prefix isn't changed, then a single C-b will trigger
tmux and two C-b's will send the second one to bash, running backward-char.
On Fri, May 27, 2011 at 9:18 AM, Shamaoke wrote:
> 27.05.2011 19:34, Florian CROUZAT
27.05.2011 19:34, Florian CROUZAT пишет:
> On Fri, 27 May 2011 07:08:54 -0700, Randy Stauner wrote:
>> what mode are you in that makes ctrl x ctrl e run the command?
>> In my vim in insert mode it scrolls
> [...]
>
>> So I'm not exactly sure what ctrl x ctrl e is doing on your pc,
> Search fo
On Fri, 27 May 2011 07:08:54 -0700, Randy Stauner wrote:
> what mode are you in that makes ctrl x ctrl e run the command?
> In my vim in insert mode it scrolls
[...]
> So I'm not exactly sure what ctrl x ctrl e is doing on your pc,
Search for C-xC-e (or edit-and-execute-command) in man bash.
what mode are you in that makes ctrl x ctrl e run the command?
In my vim in insert mode it scrolls
and in normal mode the ctrl x decrements the current character (turns e to d
or 2 to 1).
So I'm not exactly sure what ctrl x ctrl e is doing on your pc,
but often if i am using vim to compose a comma
On Fri, 27 May 2011 15:45:41 +0400, Shamaoke wrote:
> Hi.
>
> In the console it's possible to write long commands in Vim and then
> to
> run them. In order to do it one should press the combination Ctrl +
> x,
> Ctrl + e. However, for some reason this shortcut doesn't work in
> Tmux.
Works fo
Hi.
In the console it's possible to write long commands in Vim and then to
run them. In order to do it one should press the combination Ctrl + x,
Ctrl + e. However, for some reason this shortcut doesn't work in Tmux.
How can I achieve this feature to work?
Thanks.
Debian GNU/Linux 5.0.6;
GNO