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I just recently switched from bash to zsh, however I miss my Alt+LeftArrowKey and Alt+RightArrowKey to go back and forth a word at a time.

Right now, if I press Alt+LeftArrowKey I go back a couple of letters and then I'm stuck. I won't go any further backwards and it won't back to the end of the line with Alt+RightArrowKey as I would expect. I can't even use the arrow keys to go to the end of the line, only to the second to last. Can't input new chars on the line either or indeed delete.

How do I get my beloved shortcut back?

I'm on Mac OS X using Terminal if that's important.

14 Answers 14

463

Run cat then press keys to see the codes your shortcut send.
(Press Ctrl+C to kill the cat when you're done.)
For me, (ubuntu, konsole, xterm) pressing Alt+ sends ^[[1;3D, so i would put in my .zshrc

bindkey "^[[1;3C" forward-word
bindkey "^[[1;3D" backward-word

(Actually I prefer to use Ctrl + arrow to move word by word, like in a normal textbox under windows or linux gui.)

Related question: Fix key settings (Home/End/Insert/Delete) in .zshrc when running Zsh in Terminator Terminal Emulator

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  • 25
    You are my savior! On my Mac "Alt + <-" gave "^[b" and -> gave "^[f", so I added these. Works like a charm. Ctrl+arrows are reserved for switching between desktops on Mac. Sep 13, 2012 at 12:31
  • 1
    One note is that for ctrl+<- cat was reporting ^[[D for me while ctrl+v was reporting ^[OD. Ctrl+v's suggestion worked, but cat's did not. Furthermore, ctrl+v was reporting the same thing for both alt+<- and alt+->. I was able to add these two by looking at cat's output and replacing any "[[" with "O"
    – Mike S
    Feb 6, 2015 at 23:00
  • 14
    my output under cat is ^[^[[C for forward word and ^[^[[D for backward word, but updating for these in .zshrc didn't work for some reason.
    – Yunti
    May 19, 2016 at 13:13
  • 9
    @Yunti - Putting bindkey "^[^[[D" backward-word and bindkey "^[^[[C" forward-word in ~/.zprofile worked for me! Nov 6, 2018 at 17:46
  • 5
    Don't forget to run source ~/.zshrc after editing your file
    – Aaron
    Aug 4, 2020 at 18:15
330

For anyone using iTerm, regardless of shell

All of the solutions offered here take a backwards approach in my opinion. You're essentially telling your shell to listen for some esc sequence or other key binding you have set in your terminal, creating compatibility issues when you switch shells (If you SSH into some other shell, switch from BASH to ZSH, etc and you lose some if not all of your keybindings).

Most shells have a set of default sequences that come pre-bound. Furthermore, while they aren't 100% consistent, they're close enough. So the easiest way that I have found to create keybinding for a particular action in the shell is to tell your terminal application to bind to the default keybindings that are consistent across shells.

I wrote a compressive solution for getting your terminal to respond as close to native mac keybindings..

enter image description here

Open the iTerm preferences +, and navigate to the Profiles tab (the Keys tab can be used, but adding keybinding to your profile allows you to save your profile and sync it to multiple computers) and keys sub-tab, click Key Mappings and enter the following:

Move cursor one word left

+ Send Hex Codes: 0x1b 0x62

Move cursor one word right

+ Send Hex Codes: 0x1b 0x66

And that should give you the desired behavior not just in ZSH, but also if you SSH into a server running BASH, irb/pry, node etc.

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  • 2
    I was having trouble with the accepted solution because I had zsh working fine but not irb and other consoles. Erasing previous settings (in iTerm profile as suggested) works like a charm!
    – llekn
    May 28, 2018 at 19:21
  • 2
    bindkey solution would make annoying error sound on Mac. This should be the right way to do it.
    – Weishi Z
    Jun 30, 2018 at 6:42
  • 1
    @Lev Likely because either your shell isn't mapped to the default configuration. Run bindkey | grep forward-word you should see "^[f" forward-word returned but if you don't, you have 2 options. map to one of the others returned, or add "^[f" forward-word to your .zshrc.
    – Travis
    Oct 26, 2018 at 17:57
  • I will note, that "^[f" seems to be the most consistently used binding for forward-word used across shells, and the only one set by default in my version of bash.
    – Travis
    Oct 26, 2018 at 17:59
  • Somehow it worked with command button for me instead of option. Thanks man. :) Jun 29, 2019 at 13:38
93

Adding the following to ~/.zshrc worked for me on OSX Mountain Lion.

bindkey -e
bindkey '[C' forward-word
bindkey '[D' backward-word
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  • 5
    This solution triggers a "bell" in iTerm 2 with every use, so jumping between words can get really annoying. Feb 9, 2016 at 20:16
  • 1
    anyone figure out how to disable this from happening^ @MatthewMorek Jun 29, 2016 at 23:23
  • 26
    '\e\e' prevents the bell. My configuration on El Capitan with iTerm 2 in Terminal compatibility mode is bindkey "\e\e[D" backward-word bindkey "\e\e[C" forward-word Aug 28, 2016 at 13:20
  • Thank you, this solved the issue on macOs Sierra. I don't get any bell sounds on either Terminal or iTerm2.
    – Raspo
    Feb 17, 2017 at 0:21
  • How do you set it to move from the end of words and not the start or them?
    – Mafro34
    Oct 19, 2018 at 13:02
54

On MacOS High Siera 10.13.6 or Mojave 10.14.2 and using iTerm2 with ZSH To move from words I have to put like this:

bindkey "\e\e[D" backward-word
bindkey "\e\e[C" forward-word

Another solutions doesn't work fo rme

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  • 2
    This is the only solution that worked for me as well. Thank you! Mac OS Mojave
    – james-see
    Jun 21, 2019 at 20:30
  • 1
    Works on OS Catalina as well! Jan 12, 2020 at 19:08
  • \e\e[D. what keys it represents
    – Bravo
    Jan 16, 2021 at 3:44
  • Many thanks, solved the issue for me with Big Sur. Apr 3, 2021 at 13:59
  • Works, AND had no 'boop' sound <3
    – KFunk
    Jan 28, 2023 at 4:27
46

For iTerm, go to where this screenshot shows and select "Natural Text Editing"

enter image description here

if you already had some key mappings it will ask below, select accordingly not to lose any special bindings you set before. however, if you don't remember adding any bindings or just started using iTerm (on this machine), you will be safe to choose "Remove"

enter image description here

4
  • 4
    How is this not the accepted answer, perfect!
    – kjonsson
    Aug 4, 2022 at 22:03
  • 2
    YES! I'm using iTerm and this worked, thanks!
    – jurl
    Jan 11, 2023 at 12:39
  • 2
    This is the best working answer for iTerm!
    – VisioN
    Mar 2, 2023 at 15:46
  • Perfect, just do this. No fancy files.
    – nessur
    Dec 26, 2023 at 15:07
9

Though not strictly answering your question, the default binding for forward-word and backward-word are alt-f resp. alt-b.

This works everywhere, does not require you to leave the home row, and has a nice mnemonic property (f=forward, b=back), while also being consistent with ctrl-f and ctrl-b being forward-character and backward-character.

Rip out your arrow keys!

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  • 7
    doesn't work for me in zsh/iterm2, prints ƒ and ∫ (c-b cf works).
    – Davorin
    Mar 9, 2017 at 10:26
4

To make it work for me I used this answer, however I had to swap the codes (left <-> right)

⌥+← Send Hex Codes: 0x1b 0x66
⌥+→ Send Hex Codes: 0x1b 0x62

and add the following to my ~/.zshrc

bindkey -e
bindkey "^[b" backward-word
bindkey '^[f' forward-word
1
  • It would arguably be less confusing if you changed your bindkeys instead, to bind ^[f to forward-word, and not to backward-word.
    – Nickolay
    Aug 5, 2020 at 14:45
3

These keybindings work with Alacritty on Arch Linux, just add them to the ~/.zshrc file

bindkey -e

bindkey "^[[3~" delete-char                     # Key Del
bindkey "^[[5~" beginning-of-buffer-or-history  # Key Page Up
bindkey "^[[6~" end-of-buffer-or-history        # Key Page Down
bindkey "^[[H" beginning-of-line                # Key Home
bindkey "^[[F" end-of-line                      # Key End
bindkey "^[[1;3C" forward-word                  # Key Alt + Right
bindkey "^[[1;3D" backward-word                 # Key Alt + Left
2

On MacOS Monterey, use the following in ~/.zshrc to make SHIFT + Arrows jump words:

bindkey "^[[1;2C" forward-word
bindkey "^[[1;2D" backward-word

And this for Option + Arrows:

bindkey "^[^[[C" forward-word
bindkey "^[^[[D" backward-word
1

On Mavericks (10.9.4) the code is 1;5... so for binding alt with arrows I have my .zshrc using this:

bindkey "^[[1;5C" forward-word
bindkey "^[[1;5D" backward-word

You can use CTRL+V and then the command you want to use

in Yosemite use Rob's solution

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  • 1
    bindkey "[C" forward-word bindkey "[D" backward-word
    – Farkie
    Nov 17, 2015 at 15:20
1

In zsh, you can use the bindkey command to see keyboard shortcuts.

Use bindkey to explore options that are available without custom keybindings.

Namely ^[b to move backward a word and ^[f to move forward a word.

0

If you're using iTerm in CSI u mode, the bindings for your .zshrc end up being:

bindkey '^[[1;3D' backward-word
bindkey '^[[1;3C' forward-word
0

If you want iTerminal to respect Emacs style shortcuts like ^Mf and ^Mb for forward/back a word I found best way to use this tip:

Making iTerm to translate 'meta-key' in the same way as in other OSes

0

The most simple way is to go to Terminal -> Preferences -> Keyboard and toggle “Use Opt as Meta-key” ON.

It has been that way with Terminal.app for all shells (-that rely on libreadline, I presume) since the beginning of OS X / macOS.

Don’t ask me why Apple never made this the default. 🤔

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