Mercurial > vim
view src/vimtutor @ 34219:a0a4a774117b v9.1.0058
patch 9.1.0058: Cannot map Super Keys in GTK UI
Commit: https://github.com/vim/vim/commit/92e90a1e102825aa9149262cacfc991264db05df
Author: Casey Tucker <dctucker@hotmail.com>
Date: Thu Jan 25 22:44:00 2024 +0100
patch 9.1.0058: Cannot map Super Keys in GTK UI
Problem: Cannot map Super Keys in GTK UI
(Casey Tucker)
Solution: Enable Super Key mappings in GTK using <D-Key>
(Casey Tucker)
As a developer who works in both Mac and Linux using the same keyboard,
it can be frustrating having to remember different key combinations or
having to rely on system utilities to remap keys.
This change allows `<D-z>` `<D-x>` `<D-c>` `<D-v>` etc. to be recognized
by the `map` commands, along with the `<D-S-...>` shifted variants.
```vimrc
if has('gui_gtk')
nnoremap <D-z> u
nnoremap <D-S-Z> <C-r>
vnoremap <D-x> "+d
vnoremap <D-c> "+y
cnoremap <D-v> <C-R>+
inoremap <D-v> <C-o>"+gP
nnoremap <D-v> "+P
vnoremap <D-v> "-d"+P
nnoremap <D-s> :w<CR>
inoremap <D-s> <C-o>:w<CR>
nnoremap <D-w> :q<CR>
nnoremap <D-q> :qa<CR>
nnoremap <D-t> :tabe<CR>
nnoremap <D-S-T> :vs#<CR><C-w>T
nnoremap <D-a> ggVG
vnoremap <D-a> <ESC>ggVG
inoremap <D-a> <ESC>ggVG
nnoremap <D-f> /
nnoremap <D-g> n
nnoremap <D-S-G> N
vnoremap <D-x> "+x
endif
```
closes: #12698
Signed-off-by: Casey Tucker <dctucker@hotmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org>
author | Christian Brabandt <cb@256bit.org> |
---|---|
date | Thu, 25 Jan 2024 23:00:03 +0100 |
parents | d4faa2c5211b |
children |
line wrap: on
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#!/bin/sh # Start Vim on a copy of the tutor file. # Usage: vimtutor [-g] [xx] # Where optional argument -g starts vimtutor in gvim (GUI) instead of vim. # and xx is a language code like "es" or "nl". # When an argument is given, it tries loading that tutor. # When this fails or no argument was given, it tries using 'v:lang' # When that also fails, it uses the English version. # Vim could be called "vim" or "vi". Also check for "vimN", for people who # have Vim installed with its version number. # We anticipate up to a future Vim 8.1 version :-). seq="vim vim81 vim80 vim8 vim74 vim73 vim72 vim71 vim70 vim7 vim6 vi" if test "$1" = "-g"; then # Try to use the GUI version of Vim if possible, it will fall back # on Vim if Gvim is not installed. seq="gvim gvim81 gvim80 gvim8 gvim74 gvim73 gvim72 gvim71 gvim70 gvim7 gvim6 $seq" shift fi xx=$1 export xx # We need a temp file for the copy. First try using a standard command. tmp="${TMPDIR-/tmp}" TUTORCOPY=`mktemp $tmp/tutorXXXXXX || tempfile -p tutor || echo none` # If the standard commands failed then create a directory to put the copy in. # That is a secure way to make a temp file. if test "$TUTORCOPY" = none; then tmpdir=$tmp/vimtutor$$ OLD_UMASK=`umask` umask 077 getout=no mkdir $tmpdir || getout=yes umask $OLD_UMASK if test $getout = yes; then echo "Could not create directory for tutor copy, exiting." exit 1 fi TUTORCOPY=$tmpdir/tutorcopy touch $TUTORCOPY TODELETE=$tmpdir else TODELETE=$TUTORCOPY fi export TUTORCOPY # remove the copy of the tutor on exit trap "rm -rf $TODELETE" 0 1 2 3 9 11 13 15 for i in $seq; do testvim=$(which $i 2>/dev/null) if test -f "$testvim"; then VIM=$i break fi done # When no Vim version was found fall back to "vim", you'll get an error message # below. if test -z "$VIM"; then VIM=vim fi # Use Vim to copy the tutor, it knows the value of $VIMRUNTIME # The script tutor.vim tells Vim which file to copy $VIM -f -u NONE -c 'so $VIMRUNTIME/tutor/tutor.vim' # Start vim without any .vimrc, set 'nocompatible' and 'showcmd' $VIM -f -u NONE -c "set nocp showcmd" "$TUTORCOPY"