1*term.txt*      For Vim version 7.3.  Last change: 2009 Nov 05
2
3
4		  VIM REFERENCE MANUAL    by Bram Moolenaar
5
6
7Terminal information					*terminal-info*
8
9Vim uses information about the terminal you are using to fill the screen and
10recognize what keys you hit.  If this information is not correct, the screen
11may be messed up or keys may not be recognized.  The actions which have to be
12performed on the screen are accomplished by outputting a string of
13characters.  Special keys produce a string of characters.  These strings are
14stored in the terminal options, see |terminal-options|.
15
16NOTE: Most of this is not used when running the |GUI|.
17
181. Startup			|startup-terminal|
192. Terminal options		|terminal-options|
203. Window size			|window-size|
214. Slow and fast terminals	|slow-fast-terminal|
225. Using the mouse		|mouse-using|
23
24==============================================================================
251. Startup						*startup-terminal*
26
27When Vim is started a default terminal type is assumed.  For the Amiga this is
28a standard CLI window, for MS-DOS the pc terminal, for Unix an ansi terminal.
29A few other terminal types are always available, see below |builtin-terms|.
30
31You can give the terminal name with the '-T' Vim argument.  If it is not given
32Vim will try to get the name from the TERM environment variable.
33
34				*termcap* *terminfo* *E557* *E558* *E559*
35On Unix the terminfo database or termcap file is used.  This is referred to as
36"termcap" in all the documentation.  At compile time, when running configure,
37the choice whether to use terminfo or termcap is done automatically.  When
38running Vim the output of ":version" will show |+terminfo| if terminfo is
39used.  Also see |xterm-screens|.
40
41On non-Unix systems a termcap is only available if Vim was compiled with
42TERMCAP defined.
43
44					*builtin-terms* *builtin_terms*
45Which builtin terminals are available depends on a few defines in feature.h,
46which need to be set at compile time:
47    define		output of ":version"	terminals builtin	~
48NO_BUILTIN_TCAPS	-builtin_terms		none
49SOME_BUILTIN_TCAPS	+builtin_terms		most common ones (default)
50ALL_BUILTIN_TCAPS	++builtin_terms		all available
51
52You can see a list of available builtin terminals with ":set term=xxx" (when
53not running the GUI).  Also see |+builtin_terms|.
54
55If the termcap code is included Vim will try to get the strings for the
56terminal you are using from the termcap file and the builtin termcaps.  Both
57are always used, if an entry for the terminal you are using is present.  Which
58one is used first depends on the 'ttybuiltin' option:
59
60'ttybuiltin' on		1: builtin termcap	2: external termcap
61'ttybuiltin' off	1: external termcap	2: builtin termcap
62
63If an option is missing in one of them, it will be obtained from the other
64one.  If an option is present in both, the one first encountered is used.
65
66Which external termcap file is used varies from system to system and may
67depend on the environment variables "TERMCAP" and "TERMPATH".  See "man
68tgetent".
69
70Settings depending on terminal			*term-dependent-settings*
71
72If you want to set options or mappings, depending on the terminal name, you
73can do this best in your .vimrc.  Example: >
74
75   if &term == "xterm"
76     ... xterm maps and settings ...
77   elseif &term =~ "vt10."
78     ... vt100, vt102 maps and settings ...
79   endif
80<
81						*raw-terminal-mode*
82For normal editing the terminal will be put into "raw" mode.  The strings
83defined with 't_ti' and 't_ks' will be sent to the terminal.  Normally this
84puts the terminal in a state where the termcap codes are valid and activates
85the cursor and function keys.  When Vim exits the terminal will be put back
86into the mode it was before Vim started.  The strings defined with 't_te' and
87't_ke' will be sent to the terminal.  On the Amiga, with commands that execute
88an external command (e.g., "!!"), the terminal will be put into Normal mode
89for a moment.  This means that you can stop the output to the screen by
90hitting a printing key.  Output resumes when you hit <BS>.
91
92							*cs7-problem*
93Note: If the terminal settings are changed after running Vim, you might have
94an illegal combination of settings.  This has been reported on Solaris 2.5
95with "stty cs8 parenb", which is restored as "stty cs7 parenb".  Use
96"stty cs8 -parenb -istrip" instead, this is restored correctly.
97
98Some termcap entries are wrong in the sense that after sending 't_ks' the
99cursor keys send codes different from the codes defined in the termcap.  To
100avoid this you can set 't_ks' (and 't_ke') to empty strings.  This must be
101done during initialization (see |initialization|), otherwise it's too late.
102
103Some termcap entries assume that the highest bit is always reset.  For
104example: The cursor-up entry for the Amiga could be ":ku=\E[A:".  But the
105Amiga really sends "\233A".  This works fine if the highest bit is reset,
106e.g., when using an Amiga over a serial line.  If the cursor keys don't work,
107try the entry ":ku=\233A:".
108
109Some termcap entries have the entry ":ku=\E[A:".  But the Amiga really sends
110"\233A".  On output "\E[" and "\233" are often equivalent, on input they
111aren't.  You will have to change the termcap entry, or change the key code with
112the :set command to fix this.
113
114Many cursor key codes start with an <Esc>.  Vim must find out if this is a
115single hit of the <Esc> key or the start of a cursor key sequence.  It waits
116for a next character to arrive.  If it does not arrive within one second a
117single <Esc> is assumed.  On very slow systems this may fail, causing cursor
118keys not to work sometimes.  If you discover this problem reset the 'timeout'
119option.  Vim will wait for the next character to arrive after an <Esc>.  If
120you want to enter a single <Esc> you must type it twice.  Resetting the
121'esckeys' option avoids this problem in Insert mode, but you lose the
122possibility to use cursor and function keys in Insert mode.
123
124On the Amiga the recognition of window resizing is activated only when the
125terminal name is "amiga" or "builtin_amiga".
126
127Some terminals have confusing codes for the cursor keys.  The televideo 925 is
128such a terminal.  It sends a CTRL-H for cursor-left.  This would make it
129impossible to distinguish a backspace and cursor-left.  To avoid this problem
130CTRL-H is never recognized as cursor-left.
131
132					*vt100-cursor-keys* *xterm-cursor-keys*
133Other terminals (e.g., vt100 and xterm) have cursor keys that send <Esc>OA,
134<Esc>OB, etc.  Unfortunately these are valid commands in insert mode: Stop
135insert, Open a new line above the new one, start inserting 'A', 'B', etc.
136Instead of performing these commands Vim will erroneously recognize this typed
137key sequence as a cursor key movement.  To avoid this and make Vim do what you
138want in either case you could use these settings: >
139	:set notimeout		" don't timeout on mappings
140	:set ttimeout		" do timeout on terminal key codes
141	:set timeoutlen=100	" timeout after 100 msec
142This requires the key-codes to be sent within 100 msec in order to recognize
143them as a cursor key.  When you type you normally are not that fast, so they
144are recognized as individual typed commands, even though Vim receives the same
145sequence of bytes.
146
147				*vt100-function-keys* *xterm-function-keys*
148An xterm can send function keys F1 to F4 in two modes: vt100 compatible or
149not.  Because Vim may not know what the xterm is sending, both types of keys
150are recognized.  The same happens for the <Home> and <End> keys.
151			normal			vt100 ~
152	<F1>	t_k1	<Esc>[11~	<xF1>	<Esc>OP	    *<xF1>-xterm*
153	<F2>	t_k2	<Esc>[12~	<xF2>	<Esc>OQ	    *<xF2>-xterm*
154	<F3>	t_k3	<Esc>[13~	<xF3>	<Esc>OR	    *<xF3>-xterm*
155	<F4>	t_k4	<Esc>[14~	<xF4>	<Esc>OS	    *<xF4>-xterm*
156	<Home>	t_kh	<Esc>[7~	<xHome>	<Esc>OH	    *<xHome>-xterm*
157	<End>	t_@7	<Esc>[4~	<xEnd>	<Esc>OF	    *<xEnd>-xterm*
158
159When Vim starts, <xF1> is mapped to <F1>, <xF2> to <F2> etc.  This means that
160by default both codes do the same thing.  If you make a mapping for <xF2>,
161because your terminal does have two keys, the default mapping is overwritten,
162thus you can use the <F2> and <xF2> keys for something different.
163
164							*xterm-shifted-keys*
165Newer versions of xterm support shifted function keys and special keys.  Vim
166recognizes most of them.  Use ":set termcap" to check which are supported and
167what the codes are.  Mostly these are not in a termcap, they are only
168supported by the builtin_xterm termcap.
169
170							*xterm-modifier-keys*
171Newer versions of xterm support Alt and Ctrl for most function keys.  To avoid
172having to add all combinations of Alt, Ctrl and Shift for every key a special
173sequence is recognized at the end of a termcap entry: ";*X".  The "X" can be
174any character, often '~' is used.  The ";*" stands for an optional modifier
175argument.  ";2" is Shift, ";3" is Alt, ";5" is Ctrl and ";9" is Meta (when
176it's different from Alt).  They can be combined.  Examples: >
177	:set <F8>=^[[19;*~
178	:set <Home>=^[[1;*H
179Another speciality about these codes is that they are not overwritten by
180another code.  That is to avoid that the codes obtained from xterm directly
181|t_RV| overwrite them.
182							*xterm-scroll-region*
183The default termcap entry for xterm on Sun and other platforms does not
184contain the entry for scroll regions.  Add ":cs=\E[%i%d;%dr:" to the xterm
185entry in /etc/termcap and everything should work.
186
187							*xterm-end-home-keys*
188On some systems (at least on FreeBSD with XFree86 3.1.2) the codes that the
189<End> and <Home> keys send contain a <Nul> character.  To make these keys send
190the proper key code, add these lines to your ~/.Xdefaults file:
191
192*VT100.Translations:		#override \n\
193		<Key>Home: string("0x1b") string("[7~") \n\
194		<Key>End: string("0x1b") string("[8~")
195
196						*xterm-8bit* *xterm-8-bit*
197Xterm can be run in a mode where it uses 8-bit escape sequences.  The CSI code
198is used instead of <Esc>[.  The advantage is that an <Esc> can quickly be
199recognized in Insert mode, because it can't be confused with the start of a
200special key.
201For the builtin termcap entries, Vim checks if the 'term' option contains
202"8bit" anywhere.  It then uses 8-bit characters for the termcap entries, the
203mouse and a few other things.  You would normally set $TERM in your shell to
204"xterm-8bit" and Vim picks this up and adjusts to the 8-bit setting
205automatically.
206When Vim receives a response to the |t_RV| (request version) sequence and it
207starts with CSI, it assumes that the terminal is in 8-bit mode and will
208convert all key sequences to their 8-bit variants.
209
210==============================================================================
2112. Terminal options		*terminal-options* *termcap-options* *E436*
212
213The terminal options can be set just like normal options.  But they are not
214shown with the ":set all" command.  Instead use ":set termcap".
215
216It is always possible to change individual strings by setting the
217appropriate option.  For example: >
218	:set t_ce=^V^[[K	(CTRL-V, <Esc>, [, K)
219
220{Vi: no terminal options.  You have to exit Vi, edit the termcap entry and
221try again}
222
223The options are listed below.  The associated termcap code is always equal to
224the last two characters of the option name.  Only one termcap code is
225required: Cursor motion, 't_cm'.
226
227The options 't_da', 't_db', 't_ms', 't_xs' represent flags in the termcap.
228When the termcap flag is present, the option will be set to "y".  But any
229non-empty string means that the flag is set.  An empty string means that the
230flag is not set.  't_CS' works like this too, but it isn't a termcap flag.
231
232OUTPUT CODES
233	option	meaning	~
234
235	t_AB	set background color (ANSI)			*t_AB* *'t_AB'*
236	t_AF	set foreground color (ANSI)			*t_AF* *'t_AF'*
237	t_AL	add number of blank lines			*t_AL* *'t_AL'*
238	t_al	add new blank line				*t_al* *'t_al'*
239	t_bc	backspace character				*t_bc* *'t_bc'*
240	t_cd	clear to end of screen				*t_cd* *'t_cd'*
241	t_ce	clear to end of line				*t_ce* *'t_ce'*
242	t_cl	clear screen					*t_cl* *'t_cl'*
243	t_cm	cursor motion (required!)		  *E437* *t_cm* *'t_cm'*
244	t_Co	number of colors				*t_Co* *'t_Co'*
245	t_CS	if non-empty, cursor relative to scroll region	*t_CS* *'t_CS'*
246	t_cs	define scrolling region				*t_cs* *'t_cs'*
247	t_CV	define vertical scrolling region		*t_CV* *'t_CV'*
248	t_da	if non-empty, lines from above scroll down	*t_da* *'t_da'*
249	t_db	if non-empty, lines from below scroll up	*t_db* *'t_db'*
250	t_DL	delete number of lines				*t_DL* *'t_DL'*
251	t_dl	delete line					*t_dl* *'t_dl'*
252	t_fs	set window title end (from status line)		*t_fs* *'t_fs'*
253	t_ke	exit "keypad transmit" mode			*t_ke* *'t_ke'*
254	t_ks	start "keypad transmit" mode			*t_ks* *'t_ks'*
255	t_le	move cursor one char left			*t_le* *'t_le'*
256	t_mb	blinking mode					*t_mb* *'t_mb'*
257	t_md	bold mode					*t_md* *'t_md'*
258	t_me	Normal mode (undoes t_mr, t_mb, t_md and color)	*t_me* *'t_me'*
259	t_mr	reverse (invert) mode				*t_mr* *'t_mr'*
260								*t_ms* *'t_ms'*
261	t_ms	if non-empty, cursor can be moved in standout/inverse mode
262	t_nd	non destructive space character			*t_nd* *'t_nd'*
263	t_op	reset to original color pair			*t_op* *'t_op'*
264	t_RI	cursor number of chars right			*t_RI* *'t_RI'*
265	t_Sb	set background color				*t_Sb* *'t_Sb'*
266	t_Sf	set foreground color				*t_Sf* *'t_Sf'*
267	t_se	standout end					*t_se* *'t_se'*
268	t_so	standout mode					*t_so* *'t_so'*
269	t_sr	scroll reverse (backward)			*t_sr* *'t_sr'*
270	t_te	out of "termcap" mode				*t_te* *'t_te'*
271	t_ti	put terminal in "termcap" mode			*t_ti* *'t_ti'*
272	t_ts	set window title start (to status line)		*t_ts* *'t_ts'*
273	t_ue	underline end					*t_ue* *'t_ue'*
274	t_us	underline mode					*t_us* *'t_us'*
275	t_Ce	undercurl end					*t_Ce* *'t_Ce'*
276	t_Cs	undercurl mode					*t_Cs* *'t_Cs'*
277	t_ut	clearing uses the current background color	*t_ut* *'t_ut'*
278	t_vb	visual bell					*t_vb* *'t_vb'*
279	t_ve	cursor visible					*t_ve* *'t_ve'*
280	t_vi	cursor invisible				*t_vi* *'t_vi'*
281	t_vs	cursor very visible				*t_vs* *'t_vs'*
282								*t_xs* *'t_xs'*
283	t_xs	if non-empty, standout not erased by overwriting (hpterm)
284	t_ZH	italics mode					*t_ZH* *'t_ZH'*
285	t_ZR	italics end					*t_ZR* *'t_ZR'*
286
287Added by Vim (there are no standard codes for these):
288	t_IS	set icon text start				*t_IS* *'t_IS'*
289	t_IE	set icon text end				*t_IE* *'t_IE'*
290	t_WP	set window position (Y, X) in pixels		*t_WP* *'t_WP'*
291	t_WS	set window size (height, width) in characters	*t_WS* *'t_WS'*
292	t_SI	start insert mode (bar cursor shape)		*t_SI* *'t_SI'*
293	t_EI	end insert mode (block cursor shape)		*t_EI* *'t_EI'*
294		|termcap-cursor-shape|
295	t_RV	request terminal version string (for xterm)	*t_RV* *'t_RV'*
296		|xterm-8bit| |v:termresponse| |'ttymouse'| |xterm-codes|
297
298KEY CODES
299Note: Use the <> form if possible
300
301	option	name		meaning	~
302
303	t_ku	<Up>		arrow up			*t_ku* *'t_ku'*
304	t_kd	<Down>		arrow down			*t_kd* *'t_kd'*
305	t_kr	<Right>		arrow right			*t_kr* *'t_kr'*
306	t_kl	<Left>		arrow left			*t_kl* *'t_kl'*
307		<xUp>		alternate arrow up		*<xUp>*
308		<xDown>		alternate arrow down		*<xDown>*
309		<xRight>	alternate arrow right		*<xRight>*
310		<xLeft>		alternate arrow left		*<xLeft>*
311		<S-Up>		shift arrow up
312		<S-Down>	shift arrow down
313	t_%i	<S-Right>	shift arrow right		*t_%i* *'t_%i'*
314	t_#4	<S-Left>	shift arrow left		*t_#4* *'t_#4'*
315	t_k1	<F1>		function key 1			*t_k1* *'t_k1'*
316		<xF1>		alternate F1			*<xF1>*
317	t_k2	<F2>		function key 2		*<F2>*	*t_k2* *'t_k2'*
318		<xF2>		alternate F2			*<xF2>*
319	t_k3	<F3>		function key 3		*<F3>*	*t_k3* *'t_k3'*
320		<xF3>		alternate F3			*<xF3>*
321	t_k4	<F4>		function key 4		*<F4>*	*t_k4* *'t_k4'*
322		<xF4>		alternate F4			*<xF4>*
323	t_k5	<F5>		function key 5		*<F5>*	*t_k5* *'t_k5'*
324	t_k6	<F6>		function key 6		*<F6>*	*t_k6* *'t_k6'*
325	t_k7	<F7>		function key 7		*<F7>*	*t_k7* *'t_k7'*
326	t_k8	<F8>		function key 8		*<F8>*	*t_k8* *'t_k8'*
327	t_k9	<F9>		function key 9		*<F9>*	*t_k9* *'t_k9'*
328	t_k;	<F10>		function key 10		*<F10>*	*t_k;* *'t_k;'*
329	t_F1	<F11>		function key 11		*<F11>* *t_F1* *'t_F1'*
330	t_F2	<F12>		function key 12		*<F12>*	*t_F2* *'t_F2'*
331	t_F3	<F13>		function key 13		*<F13>*	*t_F3* *'t_F3'*
332	t_F4	<F14>		function key 14		*<F14>*	*t_F4* *'t_F4'*
333	t_F5	<F15>		function key 15		*<F15>*	*t_F5* *'t_F5'*
334	t_F6	<F16>		function key 16		*<F16>*	*t_F6* *'t_F6'*
335	t_F7	<F17>		function key 17		*<F17>*	*t_F7* *'t_F7'*
336	t_F8	<F18>		function key 18		*<F18>*	*t_F8* *'t_F8'*
337	t_F9	<F19>		function key 19		*<F19>*	*t_F9* *'t_F9'*
338		<S-F1>		shifted function key 1
339		<S-xF1>		alternate <S-F1>		*<S-xF1>*
340		<S-F2>		shifted function key 2		*<S-F2>*
341		<S-xF2>		alternate <S-F2>		*<S-xF2>*
342		<S-F3>		shifted function key 3		*<S-F3>*
343		<S-xF3>		alternate <S-F3>		*<S-xF3>*
344		<S-F4>		shifted function key 4		*<S-F4>*
345		<S-xF4>		alternate <S-F4>		*<S-xF4>*
346		<S-F5>		shifted function key 5		*<S-F5>*
347		<S-F6>		shifted function key 6		*<S-F6>*
348		<S-F7>		shifted function key 7		*<S-F7>*
349		<S-F8>		shifted function key 8		*<S-F8>*
350		<S-F9>		shifted function key 9		*<S-F9>*
351		<S-F10>		shifted function key 10		*<S-F10>*
352		<S-F11>		shifted function key 11		*<S-F11>*
353		<S-F12>		shifted function key 12		*<S-F12>*
354	t_%1	<Help>		help key			*t_%1* *'t_%1'*
355	t_&8	<Undo>		undo key			*t_&8* *'t_&8'*
356	t_kI	<Insert>	insert key			*t_kI* *'t_kI'*
357	t_kD	<Del>		delete key			*t_kD* *'t_kD'*
358	t_kb	<BS>		backspace key			*t_kb* *'t_kb'*
359	t_kB	<S-Tab>		back-tab (shift-tab)  *<S-Tab>* *t_kB* *'t_kB'*
360	t_kh	<Home>		home key			*t_kh* *'t_kh'*
361	t_#2	<S-Home>	shifted home key     *<S-Home>* *t_#2* *'t_#2'*
362		<xHome>		alternate home key		*<xHome>*
363	t_@7	<End>		end key				*t_@7* *'t_@7'*
364	t_*7	<S-End>		shifted end key	*<S-End>* *t_star7* *'t_star7'*
365		<xEnd>		alternate end key		*<xEnd>*
366	t_kP	<PageUp>	page-up key			*t_kP* *'t_kP'*
367	t_kN	<PageDown>	page-down key			*t_kN* *'t_kN'*
368	t_K1	<kHome>		keypad home key			*t_K1* *'t_K1'*
369	t_K4	<kEnd>		keypad end key			*t_K4* *'t_K4'*
370	t_K3	<kPageUp>	keypad page-up key		*t_K3* *'t_K3'*
371	t_K5	<kPageDown>	keypad page-down key		*t_K5* *'t_K5'*
372	t_K6	<kPlus>		keypad plus key	      *<kPlus>*	*t_K6* *'t_K6'*
373	t_K7	<kMinus>	keypad minus key     *<kMinus>*	*t_K7* *'t_K7'*
374	t_K8	<kDivide>	keypad divide	    *<kDivide>* *t_K8* *'t_K8'*
375	t_K9	<kMultiply>	keypad multiply   *<kMultiply>* *t_K9* *'t_K9'*
376	t_KA	<kEnter>	keypad enter key     *<kEnter>*	*t_KA* *'t_KA'*
377	t_KB	<kPoint>	keypad decimal point *<kPoint>*	*t_KB* *'t_KB'*
378	t_KC	<k0>		keypad 0		 *<k0>*	*t_KC* *'t_KC'*
379	t_KD	<k1>		keypad 1		 *<k1>*	*t_KD* *'t_KD'*
380	t_KE	<k2>		keypad 2		 *<k2>*	*t_KE* *'t_KE'*
381	t_KF	<k3>		keypad 3		 *<k3>*	*t_KF* *'t_KF'*
382	t_KG	<k4>		keypad 4		 *<k4>*	*t_KG* *'t_KG'*
383	t_KH	<k5>		keypad 5		 *<k5>*	*t_KH* *'t_KH'*
384	t_KI	<k6>		keypad 6		 *<k6>*	*t_KI* *'t_KI'*
385	t_KJ	<k7>		keypad 7		 *<k7>*	*t_KJ* *'t_KJ'*
386	t_KK	<k8>		keypad 8		 *<k8>*	*t_KK* *'t_KK'*
387	t_KL	<k9>		keypad 9		 *<k9>*	*t_KL* *'t_KL'*
388		<Mouse>		leader of mouse code		*<Mouse>*
389
390Note about t_so and t_mr: When the termcap entry "so" is not present the
391entry for "mr" is used.  And vice versa.  The same is done for "se" and "me".
392If your terminal supports both inversion and standout mode, you can see two
393different modes.  If your terminal supports only one of the modes, both will
394look the same.
395
396							*keypad-comma*
397The keypad keys, when they are not mapped, behave like the equivalent normal
398key.  There is one exception: if you have a comma on the keypad instead of a
399decimal point, Vim will use a dot anyway.  Use these mappings to fix that: >
400	:noremap <kPoint> ,
401	:noremap! <kPoint> ,
402<							*xterm-codes*
403There is a special trick to obtain the key codes which currently only works
404for xterm.  When |t_RV| is defined and a response is received which indicates
405an xterm with patchlevel 141 or higher, Vim uses special escape sequences to
406request the key codes directly from the xterm.  The responses are used to
407adjust the various t_ codes.  This avoids the problem that the xterm can
408produce different codes, depending on the mode it is in (8-bit, VT102,
409VT220, etc.).  The result is that codes like <xF1> are no longer needed.
410Note: This is only done on startup.  If the xterm options are changed after
411Vim has started, the escape sequences may not be recognized any more.
412
413							*xterm-resize*
414Window resizing with xterm only works if the allowWindowOps resource is
415enabled.  On some systems and versions of xterm it's disabled by default
416because someone thought it would be a security issue.  It's not clear if this
417is actually the case.
418
419To overrule the default, put this line in your ~/.Xdefaults or
420~/.Xresources:
421>
422	XTerm*allowWindowOps: 		true
423
424And run "xrdb -merge .Xresources" to make it effective.  You can check the
425value with the context menu (right mouse button while CTRL key is pressed),
426there should be a tick at allow-window-ops.
427
428							*termcap-colors*
429Note about colors: The 't_Co' option tells Vim the number of colors available.
430When it is non-zero, the 't_AB' and 't_AF' options are used to set the color.
431If one of these is not available, 't_Sb' and 't_Sf' are used.  't_me' is used
432to reset to the default colors.
433
434				*termcap-cursor-shape* *termcap-cursor-color*
435When Vim enters Insert mode the 't_SI' escape sequence is sent.  When leaving
436Insert mode 't_EI' is used.  But only if both are defined.  This can be used
437to change the shape or color of the cursor in Insert mode.  These are not
438standard termcap/terminfo entries, you need to set them yourself.
439Example for an xterm, this changes the color of the cursor: >
440    if &term =~ "xterm"
441	let &t_SI = "\<Esc>]12;purple\x7"
442	let &t_EI = "\<Esc>]12;blue\x7"
443    endif
444NOTE: When Vim exits the shape for Normal mode will remain.  The shape from
445before Vim started will not be restored.
446{not available when compiled without the |+cursorshape| feature}
447
448							*termcap-title*
449The 't_ts' and 't_fs' options are used to set the window title if the terminal
450allows title setting via sending strings.  They are sent before and after the
451title string, respectively.  Similar 't_IS' and 't_IE'  are used to set the
452icon text.  These are Vim-internal extensions of the Unix termcap, so they
453cannot be obtained from an external termcap.  However, the builtin termcap
454contains suitable entries for xterm and iris-ansi, so you don't need to set
455them here.
456							*hpterm*
457If inversion or other highlighting does not work correctly, try setting the
458't_xs' option to a non-empty string.  This makes the 't_ce' code be used to
459remove highlighting from a line.  This is required for "hpterm".  Setting the
460'weirdinvert' option has the same effect as making 't_xs' non-empty, and vice
461versa.
462
463							*scroll-region*
464Some termcaps do not include an entry for 'cs' (scroll region), although the
465terminal does support it.  For example: xterm on a Sun.  You can use the
466builtin_xterm or define t_cs yourself.  For example: >
467	:set t_cs=^V^[[%i%d;%dr
468Where ^V is CTRL-V and ^[ is <Esc>.
469
470The vertical scroll region t_CV is not a standard termcap code.  Vim uses it
471internally in the GUI.  But it can also be defined for a terminal, if you can
472find one that supports it.  The two arguments are the left and right column of
473the region which to restrict the scrolling to.  Just like t_cs defines the top
474and bottom lines.  Defining t_CV will make scrolling in vertically split
475windows a lot faster.  Don't set t_CV when t_da or t_db is set (text isn't
476cleared when scrolling).
477
478Unfortunately it is not possible to deduce from the termcap how cursor
479positioning should be done when using a scrolling region: Relative to the
480beginning of the screen or relative to the beginning of the scrolling region.
481Most terminals use the first method.  A known exception is the MS-DOS console
482(pcterm).  The 't_CS' option should be set to any string when cursor
483positioning is relative to the start of the scrolling region.  It should be
484set to an empty string otherwise.  It defaults to "yes" when 'term' is
485"pcterm".
486
487Note for xterm users: The shifted cursor keys normally don't work.  You can
488	make them work with the xmodmap command and some mappings in Vim.
489
490	Give these commands in the xterm:
491		xmodmap -e "keysym Up = Up F13"
492		xmodmap -e "keysym Down = Down F16"
493		xmodmap -e "keysym Left = Left F18"
494		xmodmap -e "keysym Right = Right F19"
495
496	And use these mappings in Vim:
497		:map <t_F3> <S-Up>
498		:map! <t_F3> <S-Up>
499		:map <t_F6> <S-Down>
500		:map! <t_F6> <S-Down>
501		:map <t_F8> <S-Left>
502		:map! <t_F8> <S-Left>
503		:map <t_F9> <S-Right>
504		:map! <t_F9> <S-Right>
505
506Instead of, say, <S-Up> you can use any other command that you want to use the
507shift-cursor-up key for.  (Note: To help people that have a Sun keyboard with
508left side keys F14 is not used because it is confused with the undo key; F15
509is not used, because it does a window-to-front; F17 is not used, because it
510closes the window.  On other systems you can probably use them.)
511
512==============================================================================
5133. Window size						*window-size*
514
515[This is about the size of the whole window Vim is using, not a window that is
516created with the ":split" command.]
517
518If you are running Vim on an Amiga and the terminal name is "amiga" or
519"builtin_amiga", the amiga-specific window resizing will be enabled.  On Unix
520systems three methods are tried to get the window size:
521
522- an ioctl call (TIOCGSIZE or TIOCGWINSZ, depends on your system)
523- the environment variables "LINES" and "COLUMNS"
524- from the termcap entries "li" and "co"
525
526If everything fails a default size of 24 lines and 80 columns is assumed.  If
527a window-resize signal is received the size will be set again.  If the window
528size is wrong you can use the 'lines' and 'columns' options to set the
529correct values.
530
531One command can be used to set the screen size:
532
533						*:mod* *:mode* *E359* *E362*
534:mod[e] [mode]
535
536Without argument this only detects the screen size and redraws the screen.
537With MS-DOS it is possible to switch screen mode.  [mode] can be one of these
538values:
539	"bw40"		40 columns black&white
540	"c40"		40 columns color
541	"bw80"		80 columns black&white
542	"c80"		80 columns color (most people use this)
543	"mono"		80 columns monochrome
544	"c4350"		43 or 50 lines EGA/VGA mode
545	number		mode number to use, depends on your video card
546
547==============================================================================
5484. Slow and fast terminals			*slow-fast-terminal*
549						*slow-terminal*
550
551If you have a fast terminal you may like to set the 'ruler' option.  The
552cursor position is shown in the status line.  If you are using horizontal
553scrolling ('wrap' option off) consider setting 'sidescroll' to a small
554number.
555
556If you have a slow terminal you may want to reset the 'showcmd' option.
557The command characters will not be shown in the status line.  If the terminal
558scrolls very slowly, set the 'scrolljump' to 5 or so.  If the cursor is moved
559off the screen (e.g., with "j") Vim will scroll 5 lines at a time.  Another
560possibility is to reduce the number of lines that Vim uses with the command
561"z{height}<CR>".
562
563If the characters from the terminal are arriving with more than 1 second
564between them you might want to set the 'timeout' and/or 'ttimeout' option.
565See the "Options" chapter |options|.
566
567If your terminal does not support a scrolling region, but it does support
568insert/delete line commands, scrolling with multiple windows may make the
569lines jump up and down.  If you don't want this set the 'ttyfast' option.
570This will redraw the window instead of scroll it.
571
572If your terminal scrolls very slowly, but redrawing is not slow, set the
573'ttyscroll' option to a small number, e.g., 3.  This will make Vim redraw the
574screen instead of scrolling, when there are more than 3 lines to be scrolled.
575
576If you are using a color terminal that is slow, use this command: >
577	hi NonText cterm=NONE ctermfg=NONE
578This avoids that spaces are sent when they have different attributes.  On most
579terminals you can't see this anyway.
580
581If you are using Vim over a slow serial line, you might want to try running
582Vim inside the "screen" program.  Screen will optimize the terminal I/O quite
583a bit.
584
585If you are testing termcap options, but you cannot see what is happening,
586you might want to set the 'writedelay' option.  When non-zero, one character
587is sent to the terminal at a time (does not work for MS-DOS).  This makes the
588screen updating a lot slower, making it possible to see what is happening.
589
590==============================================================================
5915. Using the mouse					*mouse-using*
592
593This section is about using the mouse on a terminal or a terminal window.  How
594to use the mouse in a GUI window is explained in |gui-mouse|.  For scrolling
595with a mouse wheel see |scroll-mouse-wheel|.
596
597Don't forget to enable the mouse with this command: >
598	:set mouse=a
599Otherwise Vim won't recognize the mouse in all modes (See 'mouse').
600
601Currently the mouse is supported for Unix in an xterm window, in a *BSD
602console with |sysmouse|, in a Linux console (with GPM |gpm-mouse|), for
603MS-DOS and in a Windows console.
604Mouse clicks can be used to position the cursor, select an area and paste.
605
606These characters in the 'mouse' option tell in which situations the mouse will
607be used by Vim:
608		n	Normal mode
609		v	Visual mode
610		i	Insert mode
611		c	Command-line mode
612		h	all previous modes when in a help file
613		a	all previous modes
614		r	for |hit-enter| prompt
615
616The default for 'mouse' is empty, the mouse is not used.  Normally you would
617do: >
618	:set mouse=a
619to start using the mouse (this is equivalent to setting 'mouse' to "nvich").
620If you only want to use the mouse in a few modes or also want to use it for
621the two questions you will have to concatenate the letters for those modes.
622For example: >
623	:set mouse=nv
624Will make the mouse work in Normal mode and Visual mode. >
625	:set mouse=h
626Will make the mouse work in help files only (so you can use "g<LeftMouse>" to
627jump to tags).
628
629Whether the selection that is started with the mouse is in Visual mode or
630Select mode depends on whether "mouse" is included in the 'selectmode'
631option.
632
633In an xterm, with the currently active mode included in the 'mouse' option,
634normal mouse clicks are used by Vim, mouse clicks with the shift or ctrl key
635pressed go to the xterm.  With the currently active mode not included in
636'mouse' all mouse clicks go to the xterm.
637
638							*xterm-clipboard*
639In the Athena and Motif GUI versions, when running in a terminal and there is
640access to the X-server (DISPLAY is set), the copy and paste will behave like
641in the GUI.  If not, the middle mouse button will insert the unnamed register.
642In that case, here is how you copy and paste a piece of text:
643
644Copy/paste with the mouse and Visual mode ('mouse' option must be set, see
645above):
6461. Press left mouse button on first letter of text, move mouse pointer to last
647   letter of the text and release the button.  This will start Visual mode and
648   highlight the selected area.
6492. Press "y" to yank the Visual text in the unnamed register.
6503. Click the left mouse button at the insert position.
6514. Click the middle mouse button.
652
653Shortcut: If the insert position is on the screen at the same time as the
654Visual text, you can do 2, 3 and 4 all in one: Click the middle mouse button
655at the insert position.
656
657Note: When the |-X| command line argument is used, Vim will not connect to the
658X server and copy/paste to the X clipboard (selection) will not work.  Use the
659shift key with the mouse buttons to let the xterm do the selection.
660
661							*xterm-command-server*
662When the X-server clipboard is available, the command server described in
663|x11-clientserver| can be enabled with the --servername command line argument.
664
665							*xterm-copy-paste*
666NOTE: In some (older) xterms, it's not possible to move the cursor past column
66795.  This is an xterm problem, not Vim's.  Get a newer xterm |color-xterm|.
668
669Copy/paste in xterm with (current mode NOT included in 'mouse'):
6701. Press left mouse button on first letter of text, move mouse pointer to last
671   letter of the text and release the button.
6722. Use normal Vim commands to put the cursor at the insert position.
6733. Press "a" to start Insert mode.
6744. Click the middle mouse button.
6755. Press ESC to end Insert mode.
676(The same can be done with anything in 'mouse' if you keep the shift key
677pressed while using the mouse.)
678
679Note: if you lose the 8th bit when pasting (special characters are translated
680into other characters), you may have to do "stty cs8 -istrip -parenb" in your
681shell before starting Vim.
682
683Thus in an xterm the shift and ctrl keys cannot be used with the mouse.  Mouse
684commands requiring the CTRL modifier can be simulated by typing the "g" key
685before using the mouse:
686	"g<LeftMouse>"	is "<C-LeftMouse>	(jump to tag under mouse click)
687	"g<RightMouse>" is "<C-RightMouse>	("CTRL-T")
688
689					*mouse-mode-table* *mouse-overview*
690A short overview of what the mouse buttons do, when 'mousemodel' is "extend":
691
692Normal Mode:
693event	      position	   selection	  change  action	~
694	       cursor			  window		~
695<LeftMouse>     yes	     end	    yes
696<C-LeftMouse>   yes	     end	    yes	   "CTRL-]" (2)
697<S-LeftMouse>   yes	  no change	    yes	   "*" (2)    *<S-LeftMouse>*
698<LeftDrag>      yes	start or extend (1) no		      *<LeftDrag>*
699<LeftRelease>   yes	start or extend (1) no
700<MiddleMouse>   yes	  if not active     no	   put
701<MiddleMouse>   yes	  if active	    no	   yank and put
702<RightMouse>    yes	start or extend     yes
703<A-RightMouse>  yes start or extend blockw. yes		      *<A-RightMouse>*
704<S-RightMouse>  yes	   no change	    yes	   "#" (2)    *<S-RightMouse>*
705<C-RightMouse>  no	   no change	    no	   "CTRL-T"
706<RightDrag>     yes	    extend	    no		      *<RightDrag>*
707<RightRelease>  yes	    extend	    no		      *<RightRelease>*
708
709Insert or Replace Mode:
710event	      position	   selection	  change  action	~
711	       cursor			  window		~
712<LeftMouse>     yes     (cannot be active)  yes
713<C-LeftMouse>   yes     (cannot be active)  yes	   "CTRL-O^]" (2)
714<S-LeftMouse>   yes     (cannot be active)  yes	   "CTRL-O*" (2)
715<LeftDrag>      yes     start or extend (1) no	   like CTRL-O (1)
716<LeftRelease>   yes     start or extend (1) no	   like CTRL-O (1)
717<MiddleMouse>   no      (cannot be active)  no	   put register
718<RightMouse>    yes     start or extend	    yes	   like CTRL-O
719<A-RightMouse>  yes start or extend blockw. yes
720<S-RightMouse>  yes     (cannot be active)  yes	   "CTRL-O#" (2)
721<C-RightMouse>  no	(cannot be active)  no	   "CTRL-O CTRL-T"
722
723In a help window:
724event	      position	   selection	  change  action	~
725	       cursor			  window		~
726<2-LeftMouse>   yes     (cannot be active)  no	   "^]" (jump to help tag)
727
728When 'mousemodel' is "popup", these are different:
729
730Normal Mode:
731event	      position	   selection	  change  action	~
732	       cursor			  window		~
733<S-LeftMouse>	yes	start or extend (1) no
734<A-LeftMouse>   yes start or extend blockw. no		      *<A-LeftMouse>*
735<RightMouse>	no	popup menu	    no
736
737Insert or Replace Mode:
738event	      position	   selection	  change  action	~
739	       cursor			  window		~
740<S-LeftMouse>   yes     start or extend (1) no	   like CTRL-O (1)
741<A-LeftMouse>   yes start or extend blockw. no
742<RightMouse>    no	popup menu	    no
743
744(1) only if mouse pointer moved since press
745(2) only if click is in same buffer
746
747Clicking the left mouse button causes the cursor to be positioned.  If the
748click is in another window that window is made the active window.  When
749editing the command-line the cursor can only be positioned on the
750command-line.  When in Insert mode Vim remains in Insert mode.  If 'scrolloff'
751is set, and the cursor is positioned within 'scrolloff' lines from the window
752border, the text is scrolled.
753
754A selection can be started by pressing the left mouse button on the first
755character, moving the mouse to the last character, then releasing the mouse
756button.  You will not always see the selection until you release the button,
757only in some versions (GUI, MS-DOS, WIN32) will the dragging be shown
758immediately.  Note that you can make the text scroll by moving the mouse at
759least one character in the first/last line in the window when 'scrolloff' is
760non-zero.
761
762In Normal, Visual and Select mode clicking the right mouse button causes the
763Visual area to be extended.  When 'mousemodel' is "popup", the left button has
764to be used while keeping the shift key pressed.  When clicking in a window
765which is editing another buffer, the Visual or Select mode is stopped.
766
767In Normal, Visual and Select mode clicking the right mouse button with the alt
768key pressed causes the Visual area to become blockwise.  When 'mousemodel' is
769"popup" the left button has to be used with the alt key.  Note that this won't
770work on systems where the window manager consumes the mouse events when the
771alt key is pressed (it may move the window).
772
773							*double-click*
774Double, triple and quadruple clicks are supported when the GUI is active,
775for MS-DOS and Win32, and for an xterm (if the gettimeofday() function is
776available).  For selecting text, extra clicks extend the selection:
777	click		select ~
778	double		word or % match		*<2-LeftMouse>*
779	triple		line			*<3-LeftMouse>*
780	quadruple	rectangular block	*<4-LeftMouse>*
781Exception: In a Help window a double click jumps to help for the word that is
782clicked on.
783A double click on a word selects that word.  'iskeyword' is used to specify
784which characters are included in a word.  A double click on a character
785that has a match selects until that match (like using "v%").  If the match is
786an #if/#else/#endif block, the selection becomes linewise.
787For MS-DOS and xterm the time for double clicking can be set with the
788'mousetime' option.  For the other systems this time is defined outside of
789Vim.
790An example, for using a double click to jump to the tag under the cursor: >
791	:map <2-LeftMouse> :exe "tag ". expand("<cword>")<CR>
792
793Dragging the mouse with a double click (button-down, button-up, button-down
794and then drag) will result in whole words to be selected.  This continues
795until the button is released, at which point the selection is per character
796again.
797
798							*gpm-mouse*
799The GPM mouse is only supported when the |+mouse_gpm| feature was enabled at
800compile time.  The GPM mouse driver (Linux console) does not support quadruple
801clicks.
802
803In Insert mode, when a selection is started, Vim goes into Normal mode
804temporarily.  When Visual or Select mode ends, it returns to Insert mode.
805This is like using CTRL-O in Insert mode.  Select mode is used when the
806'selectmode' option contains "mouse".
807							*sysmouse*
808The sysmouse is only supported when the |+mouse_sysmouse| feature was enabled
809at compile time.  The sysmouse driver (*BSD console) does not support keyboard
810modifiers.
811
812							*drag-status-line*
813When working with several windows, the size of the windows can be changed by
814dragging the status line with the mouse.  Point the mouse at a status line,
815press the left button, move the mouse to the new position of the status line,
816release the button.  Just clicking the mouse in a status line makes that window
817the current window, without moving the cursor.  If by selecting a window it
818will change position or size, the dragging of the status line will look
819confusing, but it will work (just try it).
820
821					*<MiddleRelease>* *<MiddleDrag>*
822Mouse clicks can be mapped.  The codes for mouse clicks are:
823     code	    mouse button	      normal action	~
824 <LeftMouse>	 left pressed		    set cursor position
825 <LeftDrag>	 left moved while pressed   extend selection
826 <LeftRelease>	 left released		    set selection end
827 <MiddleMouse>	 middle pressed		    paste text at cursor position
828 <MiddleDrag>	 middle moved while pressed -
829 <MiddleRelease> middle released	    -
830 <RightMouse>	 right pressed		    extend selection
831 <RightDrag>	 right moved while pressed  extend selection
832 <RightRelease>  right released		    set selection end
833 <X1Mouse>	 X1 button pressed	    -			*X1Mouse*
834 <X1Drag>	 X1 moved while pressed	    -			*X1Drag*
835 <X1Release>	 X1 button release	    -			*X1Release*
836 <X2Mouse>	 X2 button pressed	    -			*X2Mouse*
837 <X2Drag>	 X2 moved while pressed     -			*X2Drag*
838 <X2Release>	 X2 button release	    -			*X2Release*
839
840The X1 and X2 buttons refer to the extra buttons found on some mice.  The
841'Microsoft Explorer' mouse has these buttons available to the right thumb.
842Currently X1 and X2 only work on Win32 environments.
843
844Examples: >
845	:noremap <MiddleMouse> <LeftMouse><MiddleMouse>
846Paste at the position of the middle mouse button click (otherwise the paste
847would be done at the cursor position). >
848
849	:noremap <LeftRelease> <LeftRelease>y
850Immediately yank the selection, when using Visual mode.
851
852Note the use of ":noremap" instead of "map" to avoid a recursive mapping.
853>
854	:map <X1Mouse> <C-O>
855	:map <X2Mouse> <C-I>
856Map the X1 and X2 buttons to go forwards and backwards in the jump list, see
857|CTRL-O| and |CTRL-I|.
858
859						*mouse-swap-buttons*
860To swap the meaning of the left and right mouse buttons: >
861	:noremap	<LeftMouse>	<RightMouse>
862	:noremap	<LeftDrag>	<RightDrag>
863	:noremap	<LeftRelease>	<RightRelease>
864	:noremap	<RightMouse>	<LeftMouse>
865	:noremap	<RightDrag>	<LeftDrag>
866	:noremap	<RightRelease>	<LeftRelease>
867	:noremap	g<LeftMouse>	<C-RightMouse>
868	:noremap	g<RightMouse>	<C-LeftMouse>
869	:noremap!	<LeftMouse>	<RightMouse>
870	:noremap!	<LeftDrag>	<RightDrag>
871	:noremap!	<LeftRelease>	<RightRelease>
872	:noremap!	<RightMouse>	<LeftMouse>
873	:noremap!	<RightDrag>	<LeftDrag>
874	:noremap!	<RightRelease>	<LeftRelease>
875<
876 vim:tw=78:ts=8:ft=help:norl:
877