I’m pretty sure that the problem isn’t tmux. I get the same effect when using
xterm, iterm, and a few others over the years with no tmux running. The fix
for me is to run the unix utility “reset”.
Check out “man reset” for more info.
Hope this helps.
-Mike
-just a tmux user
On Jul 17, 201
All,
Is there a way to enable xterm like “character class” mouse selection in
tmux’s mode-mouse?
Just in case that sentence sounded like gibberish, to some, let me explain
what some of it means to help make sense of it. Stop reading if you already
know what character classes are in xterm.
I'm using tmux 1.6 and I'm really struggling to get a lot of the keymaps that I
had working in a pure Linux environment working now that I switched to a Mac.
Well, it has been a while since I switched, and I can't promise that all of
these worked, but a number of them did.
Here are the keyma
At least I now have a known
workaround. Anything else you want to see if I get one in this state again?
-Mike
From: Nicholas Marriott
To: Michael Garrett
Cc: "tmux-users@lists.sourceforge.net"
Sent: Friday, December 21, 2012 5:07 AM
Subject
I manage a lot of Centos 5.x and 6.x machines. On at least one of them, I
can't get tmux mouse mode to work. Specifically mouse-select-pane. All of my
machines call the same .tmux.conf file out of the same NFS mounted home
directory. That file contains these 4 lines:
set -g mode-mouse on
se
I manage a lot of Centos 5.x and 6.x machines. On at least one of them,
(actually a few) I can't get tmux mouse mode to work. Specifically
mouse-select-pane, but probably more. All of my machines call the same
.tmux.conf file out of the same NFS mounted home directory. That file contains
th