I'm always little bit confused when bash in vi-mode is switched to insert-mode, because it doesn't give any tip about used mode (command or edit). Is there any way to distinguish mods? May be automatic change of cursor color or something like that?
3 Answers
in /etc/inputrc (or ~/.inputrc) add this:
set show-mode-in-prompt on
this will prefix your prompt with + while in insert-mode, and : while in command mode in bash 4.3
EDIT: in the latest version of bash 4.4, you will instead get a prompt prefixed with "(ins)" or "(cmd)" by default. but, you can change that:
set vi-ins-mode-string "+"
set vi-cmd-mode-string ":"
also, you can use color codes like '\e[1;31m', but surround them with '\1' and '\2' to keep readline happy:
set vi-cmd-mode-string "\1\e[1;31m\2:\1\e[0m\2"
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In bash 5.1.8, I am getting
@
symbol before my terminal $PS1 prompt. Mar 24, 2022 at 13:19
Building on @Isaac Hanson's answer you can set the cursor style to reflect the mode (just like in VIM) by setting these in your .inputrc
:
set editing-mode vi
set show-mode-in-prompt on
set vi-ins-mode-string \1\e[6 q\2
set vi-cmd-mode-string \1\e[2 q\2
# optionally:
# switch to block cursor before executing a command
set keymap vi-insert
RETURN: "\e\n"
This will give you a beam cursor in insert mode or a block cursor for normal mode.
Other options (replace the number after \e[
):
Ps = 0 -> blinking block.
Ps = 1 -> blinking block (default).
Ps = 2 -> steady block.
Ps = 3 -> blinking underline.
Ps = 4 -> steady underline.
Ps = 5 -> blinking bar (xterm).
Ps = 6 -> steady bar (xterm).
Your terminal must support DECSCURSR (like xterm, urxvt, iTerm2). TMUX also supports these (if you set TERM=xterm-256color
outside tmux).
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1The hint with
set keymap vi-insert...
is great - it restores the block cursor when entering vim. Otherwise in vim command mode I had a bar cursor left from Bash so there was an inconsistency in vim. Btw. would you mind explaining what that syntaxset keymap ... RETURN: "\e\n"
means exactly?– bloodyJan 4, 2021 at 9:28 -
2@bloody - when you press enter in insert mode it switches to command mode first (\e = ESC) which updates the cursor before running the command– laktakJan 4, 2021 at 13:54
After years of using vi mode in korn shell, I have basically trained myself to just tap ESC
a few times before I type any commands, and ESC
then i
to start typing.
The basic premise being that if you just hit ESC
, you know precisely what mode you are in.
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The good old "turn if off and turn it back on again" technique. Works in Vi too ;) Feb 1 at 23:15
normal
mode or ininsert mode
(because there is no edit mode and bash doesn't implement the command mode)command mode
andinsert mode
. So my and your vision are both half-truth.