Currently in Bash I use set -o vi
to enable vi mode in my bash prompt.
How do I get this going in ipython?
In case someone's wandering in here recently, IPython 5.0 switched from readline to prompt_toolkit, so an updated answer to this question is to pass an option:
$ ipython --TerminalInteractiveShell.editing_mode=vi
... or to set it globally in the profile configuration (~/.ipython/profile_default/ipython_config.py
; create it with ipython profile create
if you don't have it) with:
c.TerminalInteractiveShell.editing_mode = 'vi'
pip install ipython --upgrade
Looks like a solution works for many other readline compatible apps:
Set the following in your ~/.inputrc
file:
set editing-mode vi
set keymap vi
set convert-meta on
set convert-meta on
. It conflicts with unicode entry, so if you paste or type unicode, you can trigger various events, which may be surprising. For instance, try to type ü, and you will see an interesting result.
set keymap vi
changes which keymap (i.e. mode) the following commands will affect, and set convert-meta on
changes how some keys behave. I'm not sure if you need them.
set convert-meta on
(and anything below that line) will only apply to command mode, not insert mode.
You can also interactively switch between Vi-mode and Emacs mode. According to the the readline docs to switch between them you are supposed to be able to use the 'Meta'+CTRL+j key combination but that only seems to allow me to switch to vi-mode - on my Mac (where ESC is used as the 'Meta' key) it is: ESC+CTRL+j. To switch back to Emacs mode one can use CTRL+e but that didn't appear to work for me - I had to instead do 'Meta'+CTRL+e - on my Mac it is: ESC+CTRL+e.
FYI my ~/.inputrc is set up as follows:
set meta-flag on
set input-meta on
set convert-meta off
set output-meta on
ipython
uses the readline library and this is configurable using the ~/.inputrc
file. You can add
set editing-mode vi
to that file to make all readline
based applications use vi style keybindings instead of Emacs.
ipython
switched from readline
to a python library called prompt_toolkit
in 5.0.0
so this no longer works.
Aug 9, 2016 at 23:14
I needed to be able to switch modes interactively in IPython 5 and I found you can do so by recreating the prompt manager on the fly:
a = get_ipython().configurables[0]; a.editing_mode='vi'; a.init_prompt_toolkit_cli()
You may set vi in your .ipython start-up config file. Create one if you don't have it by adding a file to ~/.ipython/profile_default/startup/
called something like start.py
. Here's an example:
# Initializing script for ipython in ~/.ipython/profile_default/startup/
from IPython import get_ipython
ipython = get_ipython()
# If in ipython, set vi and load autoreload extension
if 'ipython' in globals():
ipython.editing_mode = 'vi'
ipython.magic('load_ext autoreload')
ipython.magic('autoreload 2')
from Myapp.models import *
That last line is if you use ipython with Django, and want to import all your models by default.