On Wednesday 13 June 2018 14:21,
Dun Peal <dunpea...@gmail.com> put forth the proposition:
> The problem is that my terminal maps Ctrl-n, for certain values of n,
> to various escape sequences.
>
> For example,Ctrl-3 generates ^[ (escape), so it enters Copy Mode
> instead of switching to window 3.
>
> Ctrl-4 genertes \^ (FS, which is interpreted as SIGQUIT).
>
> Etc.
>
> Is there a way to "unmap" combinations like Ctrl-3, so they'll be
> interpreted the same as just pressing 3, and not as their current
> special escape meaning?
>
> Thanks, D.

You can unbind keys by giving an empty bind or bindkey command.

bind ^3

for example, may do it.

The :bindkey command lists various lists of binds depending on the
flag you pass it.

eg :bindkey -d lists the default map.

See bindkey in the man page.

-Dave

--

...Deep Hack Mode -- that mysterious and frightening state of
consciousness where Mortal Users fear to tread.
  -- Matt Welsh

                                                            .--.  oo
                                                           (____)//
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~'

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