Based on what Johnny pointed out above, I was simply astonished when I just found THIS out:
$ cat /usr/share/vim/vimrc.tiny
" Debian system-wide default configuration Vim
set runtimepath=~/.vim,/var/lib/vim/addons,/usr/share/vim/vimfiles,/usr/share/vim/vim74,/usr/share/vim/vimfiles/after,/var/lib/vim/addons/after,~/.vim/after
set compatible
ARGH!!!
No I did NOT expect that.
Debian (or Debian Unstable aka Ubuntu) indeed DOES put up a nightmare to their users by overriding the default setting by set compatible.
I hope that you will now know why when you're coming from FreeBSD, the first thing you would have to do is override the system-wide setting by putting a set nocompatible
into your own ~/.vimrc
. Because otherwise you'd just produce letters instead of being able to move the cursor the way you've been used to.
I think this is a horrid idea. In other words, this set compatible
line ought to be removed from the system-wide vimrc.tiny
in both Debian and Ubuntu, because it will annoy new users who are not (yet) as smart as knowing how to get the cursor keys working.
It's things like these that force them to nano
and others because of such entirely pointless blockers!
I would really want to talk with the dude who once propagated this change to the system-wide resource file in Debian. And maybe also to the people who acknowledged his change to the fullest.
Johnny is right: on your private PC, you may remove said line from the system-wide .vimrc (if there), and touch an empty .vimrc on your $HOME. Thanks so much for pointing that out, way less clutter again. Note that you MUST have that ~/.vimrc
(even if empty!) as otherwise you will not be able to use the cursors without explicitly putting in set nocompatible
.