On 03/27/2012 12:27 PM, Charles Campbell wrote:
AK wrote:
On 03/27/2012 12:03 PM, Charles Campbell wrote:
Ven Tadipatri wrote:
Well...duh..there's an easy fix for this. Just prefix the command with
'#'
Then hit :wq to save it and "run" it. Still...why does it behave this
way?
Shouldn't I be able to choose not to run the command when I exit
from Bash's vi editing mode?
This is on a Centos 5 machine, and the terminal is a Gnome terminal.

It looks like several of the answers presume you're using vim/gvim
rather than the bash shell's vi-mode (ie. :cq, which doesn't work under
bash shell). Assuming that you actually meant to ask what should you
type while in the shell, not while in vim:

Try 0D

(move cursor to beginning of line, delete contents from cursor to
end-ofline)

Regards,
Chip Campbell



I think dd is easier, too. The OP said, though, that he is talking about
vim launched from command line. -ak
Yes, dd will also work; and I agree that its easier to type.

I'm afraid that I've looked over the OP's first two messages and don't
see where vim was launched, though:

Title: Bash's vi command line editing mode
Excerpt: ...but when I do the "set -o vi" in the bash command line
shell,...
Excerpt: ...if I hit <Esc> and v on the command line, it goes into vi
editing mode...
Excerpt: ...when I exit the editor it runs the command... (when one
exits Vim, typically it doesn't cause any commands to run)

Regards,
Chip Campbell


When you hit Esc and v in bash (or zsh), it does start the vim
editor, and when you exit it, it puts the buffer in command line,
it doesn't run it immediately but waits for you to press Enter.

 -ak

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