I specified default parameters for vi in ~/.exrc. Just basic stuff
:set ts=4
:set autoindent
But now, when I start-up vi, I see a lot of junk printed on the commandline. Any idea how I can do away with that?
PS - The defaults work fine.
Using .vimrc now. That works perfectly.
For future reference, http://blog.ijun.org/2011/03/ultimate-vim-confiruation-vimrc-sample.html
Related
I'm writing a Powerline theme for IPython and I'd like to show the Vi mode in the prompt. That will be useful but is it possible? Does IPython provide a method? I couldn't find it.
This is what I want (now the INSERT segment is hard coded):
Since IPython has switched to prompt_toolkit it does not, indeed, respect .inputrc, there are plane to do so but prompt_toolkit (PTK) author need to find time (or funds to work on it...).
PTK have a vi input mode which is not perfect (Bug reports and PR welcome), and can be enable in IPython. Better than just give you the answer, here is how to find it yourself. run ipython with --help-all option, grep for vi, and keep a couple of lines after (-A2) and after before (-B2):
$ ipython --help-all | grep vi -B2 -A2
...snip...
--TerminalInteractiveShell.editing_mode=<Unicode>
Default: 'emacs'
Shortcut style to use at the prompt. 'vi' or 'emacs'.
...snip...
So there you go, you can start IPython with --TerminalInteractiveShell.editing_mode='vi', or set the configuration option in the IPython configuration file c.TerminalInteractiveShell.editing_mode='vi'.
You can also find all configuration options in the online IPython documentation.
In my emacs shell, I see this output:
^[[J~% echo $PS1
%2c%%
On my other machine, this stuff doesn't show up at all. Can anyone suggest a reason why and how to fix it?
It's related to your PS1 setting. Basically Emacs will not accept TOO fancy settings of PS1. I used the following code in ~/.bashrc to distinguish PS1 between xterm and other term simulators such as Emacs. You can give it a try.
case $TERM in
xterm)
export PS1='\[\e]0;\u#\h: \W\a\]\[\e[31;1m\]\w\n\[\e[0m\]'
;;
*)
export PS1='\[\e[31;1m\]\w\n\[\e[0m\]'
;;
esac
I have some aliases and functions defined in ~/.bashrc.
I start emacs from a terminal window using emacs -nw
When I execute M-x shell-command, the aliases and functions from ~/.bashrc are not available, but give a "command not found".
I've googled quite a bit but all the posts I come across say, if I understand them correctly, that ~/.bashrc is the place where this should work (rather than ~/.profile or ~/.bash_profile).
What am I missing?
Aliases are available only in interactive shell - a snapshot from bash man page:
Aliases are not expanded when the
shell is not interactive, unless the
expand_aliases shell option is set
using shopt
(see the description of shopt under SHELL BUILTIN COMMANDS below).
If you start Emacs from an interactive shell (in which .bashrc, etc. have executed), then the commands from your .bashrc should be available for both shell-command and shell, at least that's how it works for me.
But yeah as the other answer says, there is not real way to get a .bashrc environment in emacs. There are some documentation about a .emacs_bash file, but that never worked for me.
Okay misread your question here. If you are looking for functions and aliases instead of commands by changing paths in .bashrc, the non-interactiveness is the problem. I guess you can change the default argument to shell-command (take a look at explicit-bash-args) to make bash interactive, but that probably has unintended consequences.
The accepted answer correctly states that "aliases are available only in interactive shell".
This means that in order to load (rightly located indeed) aliases from ~/.bashrc, an interactive shell would have to be launched with Emacs's M-x shell-command (M-!).
To achieve this, add -i (interactive) switch to the M-x shell-command with:
(setq shell-command-switch "-ic")
Side Note, not Emacs related:
On some operating systems users would need to add the line source ~/.bashrc to ~/.bash_profile (or similar), since ~/.bashrc is not always auto-read by a system.
Today's Daily Vim says this:
Assuming you're using the bash shell, the following can be helpful when composing long command lines.
Start typing on the command line and then type Ctrl-x Ctrl-e, it should drop you into your system's default editor (hopefully Vim) and allow you to edit the command line from there. Once finished, save the command line, and bash will run the command.
Is there any way to do this in tcsh?
A little explanation for the uninitiated.
bindkey -v
puts you in vi-mode (oh yeah!)
and hitting v from there would take you to $EDITOR -- and all is good with the world from there on.
Hmmm... IIRC, tcsh uses a command called bindkey. Try bindkey -v at the command line. Then hit escape followed by v. It's been a while since I used tcsh so the details are a bit fuzzy. When in doubt, Google it.
When working on a linx CShell u get the option to press the up / down arrows to select the last command/s typed or the Command Buffer. This even works on Windows.
However this is not functional when working on Solaris, to which i recently switched. I am guessing that the shell is also a CShell.
Please tell me what key combination is required to have this feature on Solaris ?
The default shell in Solaris has command history, but you can also use Bash instead, it's more user friendly. Just type 'bash' (no quotes) at the command line. You can also edit /etc/passwd to make bash your default shell.
The "official" default shell for Solaris is actually sh, the original Bourne shell (see Chapter 10 of the Advanced User Guide for Solaris for more info). If you'd like to change it to csh or tcsh—and you're not root (it's generally considered bad practice to use anything but sh as root's default)—just issue passwd -e /path/to/shell_of_your_choice <loginname>. I'm guessing this would probably look like passwd -e /bin/csh <loginname>, but you'd probably want to make sure it exists, first.
It may be that it's the Korn shell in which case try <ESC>k.
bash at least will allow you to switch modes with "set -o vi" or "set -o emacs".
Maybe you can use the !! command, to repeat the previous one.
Use "echo $SHELL" to see what your login shell is. If it's ksh or bash, try "set -o emacs". If that works, you'll be able to use ^P to go back a command. ^R lets you search for a command, ^F and ^B to move around within the command.
If you can´t change your default shell, or you just want to try out one that works, you can kick off any other shell from your command line. I recommend you tcsh, which will have good command line editing and history using the arrow keys. Type /bin/tcsh at your prompt to try it out. You can use the earlier responses to change your default shell if you like tcsh. Make sure your have the following in your $HOME/.cshrc file:
set filec
set history=1000 # or some other large number
set autologout=0 # if you are logging in remotely under your account.
I hope this helps.
You enable history temporarily if you use BASH by typing
HISTSIZE=1000
which will enable up and down keys and store 1000 commands. After termal disconnetion all history will be gone.
This works on solaris 10.
For permanent solution add these lines to ~/.bashrc
HISTSIZE=1000
HISTFILESIZE=1000