I think it'd be most useful if I took this a piece at a time. The general problem is: who is the key press intended for? The terminal, or the program running inside the terminal?
As an example, "screen", which is kindof a terminal, uses Ctrl+A as a prefix for its commands, to distinguish them from things going to the running program itself. (And provides a way to send Ctrl+A.)
gnome-terminal
has several keys that it captures to do various things, including some of the ones you ask about.
Also keep in mind that a terminal's "highlighting" is separate from the terminal's cursor position. Some terminals have no ability to highlight at all.
Now, taking this key combinations at a time:
left+right arrows to move left+right
ctrl+arrow to move an entire word
home/end to move to start/end of line
Move what left and right? Bash can be configured to do this, and typically is by default. Typically, these move the cursor position.
ctrl+c/ctrl+v to copy/paste
First: does copy/paste even make sense? If you're at a VT, you don't really have a clipboard, especially if X isn't running.
Some terminals can copy text in the output, and some will also "paste" by simulating you typing the contents of the clipboard. Ctrl+Shift+V, for example, is paste in gnome-terminal
, which may help. (And Ctrl+Shift+C is copy.) As discussed earlier, the big problem with Ctrl+C and Ctrl+V is they overlap with common terminal/program commands. (Ctrl+C is send interrupt (SIGINT) and Ctrl+V is verbatim.)
Some terminals also support two modes of copying data: a more normal "just copy", and what's known as "block select" or "block copy". (Hold Ctrl, and then drag while in gnome-terminal
for example.)
Additionally, xsel -b
can be used to pipe clipboard contents around. Depends on the exact situtation whether xsel
or the terminal's version of paste is more useful. See man xsel
.
shift+arrow to highlight text
shift+ctrl+arrow to highlight an entire word
Your terminal's highlight (if it has this capability) is separate from cursor position. Again, lack of available key combos is probably a factor. Keep in mind a highlight has two positions: either the start and end, or the upper left and lower right corners. How do you manage both?
Finally, note that many GUI terminals, double-clicking a word will highlight it. (And in X, copy to the primary selection.)
screen
, as an example, has keys to switch into a mode for moving around the buffer (previous output) and copy/pasting.
I think if you make adequate use of xsel
and the primary selection, you will find clipboard operations are both rare enough and complex enough to merit using the mouse.
Best Answer
That's only mean than in zsh you cannot do something like:
In bash, the above command works as expected - turn off echoing of command. Just tried in zsh - does not work. Who has a bug? ;)
Turning off echoing is possible achieve with ESC sequences, so if your program randomly send binary sequences to terminal, {or when you CTRL-\ some screen oriented program),it behaves sometimes like
stty -echo
and you mustreset
it. It is not a bug - simply it is how terminals (and terminal emulators) works.What is strange, why in zsh
stty -echo
does not works.