I saw the vim wiki tips and it says that in order to remap Esc to CAP LOCK you have to edit the following windows code:

REGEDIT4
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Keyboard Layout]
"Scancode Map"=hex:00,00,00,00,00,00,00,00,02,00,00,00,01,00,3a,00,00,00,00,00

Is it possible to remap Esc to CAP LOCK by only adding or modifying lines in the _vimrc?

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Sorry, I have to ask: why do you want to do this? – paxdiablo Jan 27 '10 at 6:53
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paxdiablo, this is extremely common. Why? Because CAPS LOCK is the most useless key ever, but has prime real estate. It is a much handier location for, say, another ctrl key, or, if you've ever used Vim, the much-needed ESC key. – Jay Jan 27 '10 at 6:58
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"Perhaps you should think about a non-modal editor" You obviously don't use Vim. – FlemishBeeCycle Jan 27 '10 at 7:05
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I would advise against this. If you get used to having Caps Lock be your Esc, what happens when you begin working on another machine than your own? One of the great benefits of Vim is that it is platform independent and always works the same (as long as you have your .vim folder and .vimrc available) regardless of what OS you're on. By doing this you'll form a bad habit that is not portable. – Pierre-Antoine LaFayette Jan 27 '10 at 13:08
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@Pierre: I'm one of the CAPS-LOCK to ESC mappers. I can confirm that working on a machine without the remapping is annoying for me. However it is still worth the productivity increase, as 99% of the time I work on my own machines (or SSH from my own machine) which has the remapping. – Wim Coenen Jan 27 '10 at 14:56
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5 Answers

up vote 13 down vote accepted

I recommend that you use AutoHotkey for this.

You can do a per-application hotkey change:

SetTitleMatchMode,2
#IfWinActive,VIM
   CAPSLOCK::ESC
return

#IfWinActive
   CAPSLOCK::CTRL
return

This script, for example sets caps to escape in vim, and control everywhere else.

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AutoHotkey is great – alexchenco Jan 27 '10 at 11:23
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There's no vim key identifier for the capslock key, so you have to do it with a scan code.

It would be like trying to map the ctrl key or the shift key to something - those keys don't do anything by themselves, they are key modifiers, so they can't be trapped the same way.

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The mapping has to be done at the OS level instead of vim, so the complication comes from the OS. For example, on my Ubuntu machine I have the following in ~/.Xmodmap:

! Esc on caps lock
remove Lock = Caps_Lock
keysym Caps_Lock = Escape

However, I don't think the REGEDIT script is so bad. It's kind of ugly, but it's only two lines!

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2  
Easier: setxkbmap -option caps:escape or add that to the relevant section of the X/input configuration. – ephemient Jan 28 '10 at 23:10
@ephemient Thanks for that tip. – Nick Jan 12 '11 at 0:22
It is also possible to do this via the GUI. Go to System/Preferences/Keyboard, open the Layout tab, open the Options dialog. Under the Caps Lock heading there are a list of different behaviours to chose from and one of them is swapping Caps Lock and ESC. – missingno Feb 10 at 15:32
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Also you can try this: SharpKeys. I swaped CapLock and Esc with it.

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You could also use Ctrl-C to escape (Available at least in vim). Which is what I normally use. I commonly swap control and capslock, though, and have done so through registry settings in windows and keyboard conf in ubuntu.

Edit: as @mMontu kindly notes, Ctrl-C is more brutal than Esc: As stated in this appropriate question,

vim isn't going to bother checking if you just wrote part of an abbreviation, and it isn't going to run the fancy auto commands your plugins have set up for every time you leave insert mode

I hadn't noticed because my vimming is not so advanced yet.

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You should be aware of the subtle difference between Ctrl-C and ESC: stackoverflow.com/questions/5030164/… – mMontu Oct 17 '11 at 18:41
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