kakoune/doc/pages/mapping.asciidoc

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= Mapping
== Description
Creating and removing shortcuts boils down to the following commands,
respectively:
---------------------------------------
map [switches] <scope> <mode> <key> <keys>
unmap <scope> <mode> <key> [<expected>]
---------------------------------------
The *map* command makes *key* behave as if the *keys* sequence was typed.
*mode* dictates in what context the mapping will be available:
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*insert*::
insert mode
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*normal*::
normal mode
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*prompt*::
prompts, such as when entering a command through *:*, or a regex through */*
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*menu*::
mode entered when a menu is displayed with the 'menu' command
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*user*::
mode entered when the user prefix is hit (default: ',')
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*goto*::
mode entered when the goto key is hit (default: 'g')
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*view*::
mode entered when the view key is hit (default: 'v')
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*object*::
mode entered when an object selection is triggered (e.g. '<a-i>')
The context of execution of the above modes is always the current one at the
time of execution of the mapping, except for *user* mode (always executed
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in a 'normal' context). Refer to <<modes#,`:doc modes`>> for more details.
An optional *-docstring* switch followed by a string can be used
to describe what the mapping does. This docstring will be used
in autoinfo boxes.
The *unmap* command removes a mapping of *key* in the given *scope* and
*mode*. If *expected* is specified, the mapping is removed only if it is
set to the same sequence of keys passed using the *expected* argument.
For more information about the values of the *scope* parameter, refer to
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<<scopes#,`:doc scopes`>>.
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== Mapping commands
It's common to use a normal-mode or user-mode mapping to trigger a command,
like this:
----
map global user n :make-next-error<ret>
----
If you make a normal-mode mapping, you can prefix it with a count or a register
name like any other normal-mode key. You can forward this information to the
command you invoke with the `%val{count}` and `%val{register}` expansions
(See <<expansions#`:doc expansions`>>). For example:
----
map global normal = ':echo Got count %val{count} and reg %val{register}<ret>'
----
== Mappable keys
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See <<keys#,`:doc keys`>> to discover the list of default bindings.
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For *key* and *keys* in the *map* command, the following key names can
be used:
*x*, *<x>*::
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Most keys, especially alphabetic keys, represent themselves.
Keys can also be wrapped in angle-brackets for consistency
with the non-alphabetic keys below.
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*<c-x>*::
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Holding down Control while pressing the *x* key.
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*<a-x>*::
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Holding down Alt while pressing the *x* key.
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*<s-x>*, *X*, *<X>*, *<s-X>*::
Holding down Shift while pressing the *x* key.
*<s-x>*, *<s-X>* and *<X>* are treated as the same key. The *s-* modifier
only works with ASCII letters and cannot be used with other printable keys
(non-ASCII letters, digits, punctuation) because their shift behaviour
depends on your keyboard layout. The *s-* modifier _can_ be used with
special keys like *<up>* and *<tab>*.
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*<c-a-x>*::
Holding down Control and Alt while pressing the *x* key.
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*<lt>*, *<gt>*::
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The *<* and *>* characters.
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*<plus>*, *<minus>*::
The *+* and *-* characters.
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*<ret>*::
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The Return or Enter key.
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*<space>*::
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The space bar.
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*<tab>*::
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The Tab key.
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*<backspace>*::
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The Backspace (delete to the left) key.
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*<del>*::
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The Delete (to the right) key.
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*<esc>*::
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The Escape key.
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*<up>*, *<down>*, *<left>*, *<right>*::
*<pageup>*, *<pagedown>*, *<home>*, *<end>*::
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The usual cursor-movement keys.
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*<ins>*::
The Insert key.
*<F1>*, *<F2>*, ...*<F12>*::
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Function keys.
*<semicolon>*, *<percent>*::
The *;* and *%* characters, these keys allow reducing the amount of
backslash escaping in scripts (for example, `exec \%` becomes `exec
<percent>`)
NOTE: Although Kakoune allows many key combinations to be mapped, not every
possible combination can be triggered. For example, due to limitations in
the way terminals handle control characters, mappings like *<c-s-a>* are
unlikely to work in Kakoune's terminal UI.
== Default mappings
Some mappings exist by default in the global scope:
In normal mode:
* `<left>` maps to `h`
* `<right>` maps to `l`
* `<up>` maps to `k`
* `<down>` maps to `j`
* `<home>` maps to `<a-h>`
* `<end>` maps to `<a-l>`
Shift version of those mappings exist as well
(for example `<s-left>` maps to `H`).