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 (____)// ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~' _______________________________________________ screen-users mailing list screen-users@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/screen-users