On Sunday, August 19, 2012 6:35:03 PM UTC-5, [email protected] wrote:
> Hello all.
> I am trying to do some keymappings to keys combinations which uses the Alt
> key.
> My problem is that, except for Alt-[Left|right|Up|Down] combination, any
> other combination I try like, Alt-= (M-=),
> Alt-t(M-t), etc ...
>
> Seems to be recognized as utf characters, so for instance <C-M-w> is
> recognized as <97> when I check my keymaps using the :map command.
> Similar thing happens to <M-t> which is recognized as an O with a hat symbol
> on it.
>
> So seems my Alt combination are mapped to utf characters rather than the real
> keyboard keys.
> I have been looking into google and seems vim always translates this
> combination of Alt keys to UTF characters.
> I understand that this is done while in insert mode, but why the map nmap
> command precessed <M-t> as an UTF character when I put something like:
>
> nmap <silent> <M-t> <C-W>v
> In my .vimrc?
> Is there any reliable method to use Alt keymaps that works in both vim and
> gvim and for Linux and Mac?
>
Even though Vim sees the keys as a Unicode character, pressing the keys should
still execute the mapping.
I don't think Vim can reliably do CTRL+Alt mappings, but I believe Alt-{key}
mappings normally work fine.
Where do you encounter problems? Is it just terminal Vim, or also gvim? What
happens when you press your ALT-t mapping? What did you expect to happen
instead? What information led you to think it wouldn't work?
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