After searching a bit on the net it seems that I can't map CtrlSpace to anything/alot. Is there a way to do it today, what I found was usually 2 years old.
8 Answers
I've run into the same issue, the short answer is yes you can, and not only in the gui version. Adding this on you .vimrc
is enough:
inoremap <C-Space> <C-x><C-o>
inoremap <C-@> <C-Space>
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3I know this is really nitpicking, but I would consider using
inoremap
instead of justimap
, since the former will make sure that any messing around you do later won't change these settings. But, really, that's overcautious overkill.– ravronJun 10, 2013 at 16:09 -
17
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I tried this again, and in fact... it just worked with
inoremap <C-Space> <C-x><C-o>
and works fine in terminal vim and gvim. Now if I add the last part, it stops working. Trying with an "empty" vimrc (vim -u NONE
), none of the combinations work. So I guess some configuration has to be set in your.vimrc
(which one is something that I don't know). Sep 26, 2013 at 19:12 -
1In my experience, using
inoremap
for these 2 mappings worked on Mac but not Linux. I changed them toimap
and now it works on both platforms. So::imap <C-@> <C-Space>
and:imap <C-Space> <C-x><C-o>
– jonS90Jun 29, 2016 at 0:26 -
1Could you add a link to the relevant docs of
<C-@>
? I've been searching but can't find anything. I'm curious what this answer actually does. I'd love to have a deeper understanding of this.... nevermind. Answered by @romainl. It can be found in:h CTRL-@
. Seems it was too easy!– exhumaSep 20, 2017 at 15:17
The problem seems to be that Terminal.app doesn't interpret <C-Space>
correctly and Vim understands it as <C-@>
which is a built-in mapping (:help CTRL-@
).
Maybe you could go with something like the following in your .vimrc:
if !has("gui_running")
inoremap <C-@> <C-x><C-o>
endif
which seems to work, here, but I don't like the idea of overriding built-ins like that.
Instead you should try with <Leader>
(:help leader
), it gives you huge possibilities for defining your own custom mappings and (depending on the mapleader
you choose) won't interfere with OS/app specific shortcuts/limitations and hence be more portable.
With this in my .vimrc:
let mapleader=","
inoremap <leader>, <C-x><C-o>
I just hit ,,
to complete method names.
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4It is not only Terminal.app who outputs NULL when you type
<C-Space>
. I won't be surprised if I find out that it is written in some standart: at least urxvt and konsole also do this thing.– ZyXOct 11, 2011 at 19:28
The nitpicker broke pablox solution. The crux of the solution was just about remapping. So when you disable remapping, it cannot work.
If you really want to throw in a noremap
, this is what it looks like:
inoremap <expr><C-space> neocomplete#start_manual_complete()
imap <C-@> <C-Space>
What will not work: inoremap <C-@> <C-Space>
'cause the <C-Space>
part will not be remapped itself.
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For me results in:
E117: Unknown function: neocomplete#start_manual_complete E15: Invalid expression: neocomplete#start_manual_complete()
Aug 29, 2014 at 21:27 -
@user2609980 you need to map to a function that is available in your setup. the function I used as an example was taken from my personal setup.– oliverSep 7, 2014 at 19:06
- Have you tried
:inoremap <c-space> <c-x><c-o>
? - Does CtrlX CtrlO do anything when you type in insert mode? Is
omnifunc
set?
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This was the solution for me on MacOS 12, in iterm2, in Tmux, with a brew-installed Vim 8. May 17 at 0:37
Add the following code to ~/.vimrc
:
" Ctrl-Space for completions. Heck Yeah!
inoremap <expr> <C-Space> pumvisible() \|\| &omnifunc == '' ?
\ "\<lt>C-n>" :
\ "\<lt>C-x>\<lt>C-o><c-r>=pumvisible() ?" .
\ "\"\\<lt>c-n>\\<lt>c-p>\\<lt>c-n>\" :" .
\ "\" \\<lt>bs>\\<lt>C-n>\"\<CR>"
imap <C-@> <C-Space>
Source: https://coderwall.com/p/cl6cpq
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Disregard my edition. I think is wrong. There should be a cancel edit option. Aug 13, 2020 at 2:17
To accommodate both Windows and Linux I applied this to ~/.vimrc
if has("unix")
inoremap <C-@> <c-x><c-o>
elseif has("win32")
inoremap <C-Space> <c-x><c-o>
endif
I had better results with this set of mappings across all modes on Mac OS. Have not tested Windows or Linux.
I don't understand how the excepted answer is supposed to work in terminal mode.
inoremap <C-space> <ESC>
vnoremap <C-space> <ESC>
cnoremap <C-space> <C-c>
" When in terminal, <C-Space> gets interpreted as <C-@>
imap <C-@> <C-space>
vmap <C-@> <C-space>
cmap <C-@> <C-space>
Like the others said, using inoremap
with the correct key for your term (as discovered using i_Ctrl_v) should work. I will add to this another possible cause for problems with insert mode mappings: paste mode. As the docs state:
When the 'paste' option is switched on (also when it was already on): - mapping in Insert mode and Command-line mode is disabled
This may seem irrelevant, but this very thing tripped me up trying to get a similar inoremap
binding to work in Vim 8.2. I had set paste
in my .vimrc, and had to chop it up with :finish
statements (as [recommended in the vim faq) to isolate the line causing the problem.