23

When I use VIM in the terminal on my local machine (Mac OS X Snow Leopard), the delete key is really backspace (i.e., destructive backspace).

When I SSH into a particular server, for some reason it's regular delete (i.e., delete the character under the cursor).

How can I change it to be consistent? I've tried a dozen solutions, but nothing seems to work.

Checking the "Delete sends Ctrl-H" box in Terminal Preferences->Advanced doesn't work -- this is non-destructive backspace.

I've tried about a hundred different key mappings in VIM, to no avail.

Interestingly, the key works as expected when I'm typing commands in VIM (e.g., : <something>) -- it's only screwed up when I'm editing the actual text. Any ideas?

4 Answers 4

18

This worked for me:

:set backspace=indent,eol,start

I'm not sure exactly what it does but it is listed as a possible solution here and here. I found this line in a vimrc file distributed with Ubuntu where the behavior of the mac "delete" key (otherwise known as the "backspace" key) works as expected without any other configuration.

The behavior I was experiencing was a bell sound (no characters deleted) when pressing the mac "delete" key (otherwise known as the "backspace" key) in insert mode. I am using a compiled version of vim 7.3 on "amazon linux" over ssh from a mac. Pressing <ctrl-v><delete> when in insert mode resulted in ^?.

8

Couple of ideas to try:

  • In your .vimrc file on the remote server, add this line:

    set term=linux
    
  • In your .bash_profile file (or whatever corresponds to your shell of choice) on the remote server:

    stty erase ^H
    

    Note: to make this work correctly, you must type ctrl-v, then ctrl-h to type the ^H character.

    Also, make sure "Delete sends Ctrl-H" is checked in your Terminal prefs.

5

Try this: http://www.alecjacobson.com/weblog/?p=295

I fixed the problem by changing my Terminal.app settings. Under Terminal > Preferences choose Advanced. Check “Delete sends Ctrl-H”. Now, vi and vim should understand the delete key more intuitively.

Note: Mapping the “delete” key in my vimrc file seemed like probably the correct way to do this, but that’s a lot of trouble. Is there any reason not to do it this way?

4

Try adding

set <Del>=<C-v><Del>

to the vimrc on the target machine. Here you must type <C-v><Del> while being logged on the target machine. If this does not work, check verbose imap <Del>: this should tell you whether some plugin has remapped <Del> in insert mode.

2
  • Hi ZyX, tried this but no go. When I hit <Ctrl-v><Del> I end up with a command looking like ":set <Del>=^?". I entered it both at the command line in VIM and in my .vimrc; also tried setting <BS> in the same way, but nothing makes any difference at all. verbose imap <Del> and verbose imap <BS> both say "no mapping found." Very frustrating since, as I mentioned, the key works as it should (as destructive backspace) when I'm actually typing the VIIM command at the :prompt; just goes wrong in the actual document.
    – Aeonaut
    Nov 14, 2010 at 22:19
  • @Aeonaut Very strange since I can make <F1> work like <Del> with set <Del>=<C-v><F1> <F1>=<C-v><F2>. On all my terminals <Del> sends "^[[3~", but I saw terminals where it sends ^?. What do you mean by «destructive backspace»? Maybe you should try inoremap <Del> <Esc>cl (I use this sequence for deleting previous character in transliteration plugin, it works regardless of backspace and delcombine options). Also try :fixdel command.
    – ZyX
    Nov 15, 2010 at 4:10

Your Answer

Reminder: Answers generated by Artificial Intelligence tools are not allowed on Stack Overflow. Learn more

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge that you have read and understand our privacy policy and code of conduct.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.