In vim, how can I map "save" (:w
) to ctrl-s.
I am trying "map" the command, but xterm freezes when I press ctrl-s.
If I give ctrl-v,ctrl-s still I see only a ^
, not ^S
.
In vim, how can I map "save" (:w
) to ctrl-s.
I am trying "map" the command, but xterm freezes when I press ctrl-s.
If I give ctrl-v,ctrl-s still I see only a ^
, not ^S
.
Ctrl+S is a common command to terminals to stop updating, it was a way to slow the output so you could read it on terminals that didn't have a scrollback buffer. First find out if you can configure your xterm to pass Ctrl+S through to the application. Then these map commands will work:
noremap <silent> <C-S> :update<CR>
vnoremap <silent> <C-S> <C-C>:update<CR>
inoremap <silent> <C-S> <C-O>:update<CR>
BTW: if Ctrl+S freezes your terminal, type Ctrl+Q to get it going again.
In linux with VI, you want to press Ctrl-S and have it save your document. This worked for me, put the following three lines in your .vimrc file. This file should be located in your home directory: ~/.vimrc
. If this file doesn't exist you can create it.
:nmap <c-s> :w<CR>
:imap <c-s> <Esc>:w<CR>a
The first line says: pressing Ctrl-S within a document will perform a :w <enter>
keyboard combination.
The second line says: pressing Ctrl-S within a document while in 'insert' mode will escape to normal mode, perform a :w <enter
, then press a
to get back into insert mode. Your cursor may move during this event.
You may notice that pressing Ctrl-S performs an 'XOFF' which stops commands from being received (If you are using ssh).
To fix that, place these two commands in your ~/.bash_profile
bind -r '\C-s'
stty -ixon
What that does is turn off the binding of Ctrl-S and gets rid of any XOFF onscreen messages when pressing Ctrl-S. Note, after you make changes to your .bash_profile you have to re-run it with the command 'source .bash_profile' or logout/login.
More Info: http://vim.wikia.com/wiki/Map_Ctrl-S_to_save_current_or_new_files
imap
commands? It seems like you only need imap <c-s> <Esc>:w<CR>a
. Thanks.
vim
# ~/.vimrc
nnoremap <c-s> :w<CR> " normal mode: save
inoremap <c-s> <Esc>:w<CR>l " insert mode: escape to normal and save
vnoremap <c-s> <Esc>:w<CR> " visual mode: escape to normal and save
zsh (if you use)
# ~/.zshrc
# enable control-s and control-q
stty start undef
stty stop undef
setopt noflowcontrol
bash (if you use)
# ~/.bash_profile or ~/.bashrc
# enable control-s and control-q
stty -ixon
vnoremap <c-s> <Esc>:w<CR> # visual mode: escape to normal and save
?
Oct 23, 2015 at 22:44
#
doesn't work for comments in .vimrc
. Use the double quote ("
): " <comment txt>
alias vim="stty stop '' -ixoff; vim"
Why?, What's happening? See Here, but basically for most terminals ctrl+s is already used for something, so this alias vim so that before we run vim we turn off that mapping.
nmap <c-s> :w<cr>
imap <c-s> <esc>:w<cr>a
Why? What's happening? This one should be pretty obvious, we're just mapping ctrl+s to different keystrokes depending on if we are in normal mode or insert mode.
If you are using nvim & init.lua add the following lines
vim.keymap.set({'i'}, '<C-s>', '<C-o>:w<ENTER>')
vim.keymap.set({'n'}, '<C-s>', ':w<ENTER>')
Vim ships with a file mswin.vim
that maps the more popular shortcuts we all know and love from Windows applications. As documented in :help mswin.vim
, the line
source $VIMRUNTIME/mswin.vim
will provide support for Ctrl-C, Ctrl-V etc. and - undocumented but true - Ctrl-S to save the buffer, even in Insert mode. Instead of re-inventing the wheel, use this one-liner to get the most shortcuts with the least unwanted side effects.
Actually, mswin.vim
provides the following mappings:
" Use CTRL-S for saving, also in Insert mode (<C-O> doesn't work well when
" using completions).
noremap <C-S> :update<CR>
vnoremap <C-S> <C-C>:update<CR>
inoremap <C-S> <Esc>:update<CR>gi
And yes, it does work on Linux as well (as long as freezing terminals are not the problem as explained in the accepted answer).