I managed to correct my terminal key-code for Shift+Enter
by sending the key-code Vim apparently expects. Depending on your terminal,
(Adding Ctrl+Enter as a bonus!)
iTerm2
For a single Profile open Preferences → Profiles → Keys → [+] (Add)
For all profiles open Preferences →
Keys → [+] (Add)
Keyboard shortcut: (Hit Shift+Enter)
Action: Send Escape Sequence
Esc+ [13;2u
Repeat for Ctrl+Enter, with sequence: [13;5u
urxvt, append to your .Xresources
file:
URxvt.keysym.S-Return: \033[13;2u
URxvt.keysym.C-Return: \033[13;5u
Alacritty, add following to your ~/.config/alacritty/alacritty.toml
:
[[keyboard.bindings]]
chars = "\u001B[13;2u"
key = "Return"
mods = "Shift"
[[keyboard.bindings]]
chars = "\u001B[13;5u"
key = "Return"
mods = "Control"
Kitty, in ~/.config/kitty/kitty.conf
:
map shift+enter send_text all \x1b[13;2u
map ctrl+enter send_text all \x1b[13;5u
Windows Terminal
Add these to the actions array of the JSON config (via Settings):
{
"keys": "shift+enter",
"command": { "action": "sendInput", "input": "\u001b[13;2u" }
},
{
"keys": "ctrl+enter",
"command": { "action": "sendInput", "input": "\u001b[13;5u" }
}
i<CR><ESC>
to <C-J>. That results in a nice <S-J> and <C-J> duality for splitting and joining lines. And use unimpaired’s]<space>
for adding empty lines (as proposed by Peter Rickner).