On 02/09/11 19:59, William E. Skeith III wrote:
> Hello, > > I am trying to map some basic Ctrl+Alt key combinations for GVIM on windows, > for example> > :imap<C-M-L> <C-Right> > > but I've become seriously stuck. It seems that windows GVIM does not respond > at all to<C-M-x>, where x is virtually any printable character (0-9,a-z, > punctuation, etc.). > > To test, I hit ctrl-Q while in insert mode, and then ctrl-alt-x key > combinations, (as described above) and nothing happens at all. However, it > does respond to other non-printable keys, for example<M-C-Left>, but that's > about it. > > Can anyone else confirm this to be the case? And if so, are there any > work-arounds? Key combinations like that would be extremely useful for me... > By the way, I'm using version 7.3.46, installed just a few days ago. > > Many thanks in advance for your help. > > -WES > Ctrl-Alt-letter keys may be preempted by the OS, or they may trigger a menu. When you type :verbose set wak? what is the answer? Oh, and 7.3.046 is already old hat: for W32 I recommend the "Vim without Cream" distribution, available as gvim-<version>.exe (a self-installer, currently for 7.3.289) at http://sourceforge.net/projects/cream/files/ Best regards, Tony. ============================================ Hi Tony, Thanks for the quick response! I had already discovered the issue with menu interference, so I have set winaltkeys=no from my vimrc. This problem does seem a little conspicuous to me, since it is not just some keys, but _every_ key. GVIM is only responding to <M-C-k> if k is an arrow key, or some other control key like <BS>,<Del>,<Ins>. I will upgrade as you suggested, and see if that helps... Thanks again. -WES Hm, if Ctrl-V (or Crl-Q if you use Ctrl-V to paste) followed by Ctrl-Alt-<letter> fails to elicit any response (with 'showmode' on, the ^V or maybe ^Q remains in the lower right corner, and nothing appears in the buffer), then for some reason Vim doesn't get that key. Maybe the OS snatches it, I don't know. It might be better in gvim than in Console Vim, but no guarantee. In general, the "best" keys for the {lhs} of a mapping (keys which Vim will receive and which don't already have a preset binding) are the function keys, F2 to F12 (F1 is already Help, and F10 may or may not be a Menu key), then after that on many systems Shift-F1 to Shift-F12 (on Linux, Ctrl-F1 to Ctrl-F12 are usually reserved by the window manager for its own purposes, but if you run Vim only on Windows they should be usable too). Best regards, Tony. ============================================= Hi Tony, Yep, that is what happens: ^V just sits in the corner in spite of me banging on pretty much every <M-C-x> key. This is in GVIM on windows 7, and I have now updated to version 7.3.289 (thanks for the tip, by the way). The function keys are a good suggestion, however the problem is that I had planned on using the above combination frequently during typing: my intent was to use a mapping like this > :imap<C-M-L> <C-Right> to quickly move a word right without leaving insert mode. In my other (non-modal) editor, I use the Alt key to kind of "temporarily enter normal mode", in Vim terms. I find it a bit slow to leave insert mode, enter the right command, and then come back, just to skip over a word. (However, this is only day 4 of my Vim usage, so maybe I'll get used to it.) Anyhow, can anyone with the same setup as mine confirm that this is hopeless? I have several other editors that respond to all of these keys, and I've read plenty of other accounts online of people mapping <M-C-x> (although not on windows) so I'm thinking that maybe there's still hope... Thanks! -WES -- You received this message from the "vim_use" maillist. Do not top-post! Type your reply below the text you are replying to. For more information, visit http://www.vim.org/maillist.php
