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I'm trying to bind the command usualy binded to ^W with ctrl+backspace.

I have two problem here, one for each parameter of the bindkey command:

  • what is string to mean the ctrl+backspace
  • what is the command to delete the previous word
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  • 1
    While some control key combinations have straightforward ASCII equivalents (Control-H sending ASCII 0x08, for example), control-backspace does not. Your terminal emulator must be configured to generate a string, much like it does for a function key or arrow key.
    – chepner
    Jan 21, 2014 at 20:05

2 Answers 2

49

One may use bindkey '^H' backward-kill-word.

Note that, on old versions of GNOME terminal, it won't work; see How do I get Ctrl-Backspace to delete a word in vim within gnome-terminal? and Bug 420039 - VTE doesn't distinguish between backspace and control-backspace.
As reported by thorbjornwolf in his comment, commit 23c7cd0f fixed it.

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7

As I pointed out here there is a chance that the keystrokes are different in some systems.

If the output of showkey -a is:

  • Ctrl+Backspace is ^?

then you should add the following line in your ~/.zshrc file:

bindkey '^?' backward-kill-word
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  • 2
    showkey -a is extremely useful! Mar 14 at 12:11

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