bind [(-M | --mode) MODE] [(-m | --sets-mode) NEW_MODE] [--preset | --user] [-s | --silent] KEYS COMMAND ... bind [(-M | --mode) MODE] [--preset] [--user] [--color WHEN] [KEYS] bind [-a | --all] [--preset] [--user] [--color WHEN] bind (-f | --function-names) bind (-K | --key-names) bind (-L | --list-modes) bind (-e | --erase) [(-M | --mode) MODE] [--preset] [--user] [-a | --all] | KEYS ...
bind manages key bindings.
If both KEYS and COMMAND are given, bind adds (or replaces) a binding in MODE. If only KEYS is given, bind lists any existing bindings for those keys in MODE or in all modes. If no KEYS argument is provided, bind lists all bindings in MODE or in all modes.
KEYS is a comma-separated list of key names. Modifier keys can be specified by prefixing a key name with a combination of ctrl-, alt-, shift- and super- (i.e. the “windows” or “command” key). For example, pressing w while holding the Alt modifier is written as alt-w. Key names are case-sensitive; for example alt-W is the same as alt-shift-w. ctrl-x,ctrl-e would mean pressing ctrl-x followed by ctrl-e.
Some keys have names, usually because they don’t have an obvious printable character representation. They are:
up, down, left and right,backspace,comma (,),delete,end,enter,escape,f1 through f12.home,insert,menu,minus (-),pageup,pagedown,printscreen,space andtab,These names are case-sensitive.
An empty value ('') for KEYS designates the generic binding that will be used if nothing else matches. For most bind modes, it makes sense to bind this to the self-insert function (i.e. bind '' self-insert). This will insert any keystrokes that have no bindings otherwise. Non-printable characters are ignored by the editor, so this will not result in control sequences being inserted.
To find the name of a key combination you can use fish_key_reader.
COMMAND can be any fish command, but it can also be one of a set of special input functions. These include functions for moving the cursor, operating on the kill-ring, performing tab completion, etc. Use bind --function-names or see below for a list of these input functions.
Note
If a script changes the commandline, it should finish by calling the repaint special input function.
Key bindings may use “modes”, which mimics vi’s modal input behavior. The default mode is “default” (in vi-mode, that’s vi’s “normal” mode). Every key binding applies to a single mode; you can specify which one with -M MODE. If the key binding should change the mode, you can specify the new mode with -m NEW_MODE. The mode can be viewed and changed via the $fish_bind_mode variable. If you want to change the mode from inside a fish function, use set fish_bind_mode MODE.
To save custom key bindings, put the bind statements into config.fish. Alternatively, fish also automatically executes a function called fish_user_key_bindings if it exists.
The following options are available:
Display a list of available input functions
Display a list of available named keys such as backspace.
Display a list of defined bind modes
Specify a bind mode that the bind is used in. Defaults to “default”. If you use vi bindings, that’s the command mode, what vi calls “normal” mode.
Change the current mode to NEW_MODE after this binding is executed
Erase the binding with the given sequence and mode instead of defining a new one. Multiple sequences can be specified with this flag. Specifying -a or --all with -M or --mode erases all binds in the given mode regardless of sequence. Specifying -a or --all without -M or --mode erases all binds in all modes regardless of sequence.
See --erase
Specify if bind should operate on user or preset bindings. User bindings take precedence over preset bindings when fish looks up mappings. By default, all bind invocations work on the “user” level except for listing, which will show both levels. All invocations except for inserting new bindings can operate on both levels at the same time (if both --preset and --user are given). --preset should only be used in full binding sets (like when working on fish_vi_key_bindings).
Silences error message for unbound sequences.
Controls when to use syntax highlighting colors when listing bindings. WHEN can be auto (the default, colorize if the output is a terminal), always, or never.
Displays help about using this command.
The following special input functions are available:
and only execute the next function if the previous succeeded (note: only some functions report success)
accept-autosuggestion accept the current autosuggestion. Returns false when there was nothing to accept.
backward-char move one character to the left. If the completion pager is active, select the previous completion instead.
backward-char-passive move one character to the left, but do not trigger any non-movement-related operations. If the cursor is at the start of the commandline, does nothing. Does not change the selected item in the completion pager UI when shown.
backward-token move one argument to the left
backward-delete-char deletes one character of input to the left of the cursor
backward-kill-token move the argument to the left of the cursor to the killring
backward-kill-line move everything from the beginning of the line to the cursor to the killring
backward-kill-path-component move one path component to the left of the cursor to the killring. A path component is everything likely to belong to a path component, i.e. not any of the following: /={,}’":@ |;<>&, plus newlines and tabs.
backward-kill-word move the word to the left of the cursor to the killring, until the start of the current word (like vim’s db)
backward-kill-bigword move the whitespace-delimited word to the left of the cursor to the killring, until the start of the current word (like vim’s dB)
backward-path-component move one path component to the left
backward-word move one word to the left, stopping at the start of the previous word (like vim’s b, or Emacs’ M-b but differs slightly in word division rules)
backward-bigword move one whitespace-delimited word to the left, stopping at the start of the previous word (like vim’s B)
backward-word-end move to the end of the previous word (like vim’s ge)
backward-bigword-end move to the end of the previous whitespace-delimited word (like vim’s gE)
beginning-of-buffer moves to the beginning of the buffer, i.e. the start of the first line
beginning-of-history move to the beginning of the history
beginning-of-line move to the beginning of the line
begin-selection start selecting text
cancel close the pager if it is open, or undo the most recent completion if one was just inserted
cancel-commandline cancel the current commandline and replace it with a new empty one, leaving the old one in place with a marker to show that it was cancelled
capitalize-word make the current word begin with a capital letter
clear-commandline empty the entire commandline
clear-screen clears the screen and redraws the prompt.
scrollback-push pushes earlier output to the terminal scrollback, positioning the prompt at the top. This requires the terminal to implement the ECMA-48 SCROLL UP command and cursor position reporting.
complete guess the remainder of the current token
complete-and-search invoke the searchable pager on completion options (for convenience, this also moves backwards in the completion pager)
delete-char delete one character to the right of the cursor
delete-or-exit delete one character to the right of the cursor, or exit the shell if the commandline is empty
down-line move down one line
downcase-word make the current word lowercase
end-of-buffer moves to the end of the buffer, i.e. the end of the last line; or if already at the end of the commandline, accept the current autosuggestion.
end-of-history move to the end of the history
end-of-line move to the end of the line
end-selection end selecting text
expand-abbr expands any abbreviation currently under the cursor
execute run the current commandline
exit exit the shell
forward-token move one argument to the right
forward-char move one character to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept the current autosuggestion. If the completion pager is active, select the next completion instead.
forward-char-passive move one character to the right, but do not trigger any non-movement-related operations. If the cursor is at the end of the commandline, does not accept the current autosuggestion (if any). Does not change the selected item in the completion pager, if shown.
forward-path-component move one path component to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept a path component from the current autosuggestion.
forward-single-char move one character to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept a single char from the current autosuggestion.
forward-word move one word to the right, stopping after the end of the current word; or if at the end of the commandline, accept one word from the current autosuggestion.
forward-word-vi like forward-word, but stops at the start of the next word (like vim’s w)
forward-word-end like forward-word, but stops at the end of the next word (like vim’s e)
forward-bigword move one whitespace-delimited word to the right, stopping after the end of the current word; or if at the end of the commandline, accept one word from the current autosuggestion.
forward-bigword-vi like forward-bigword, but stops at the start of the next word (like vim’s W)
forward-bigword-end like forward-bigword, but stops at the end of the next word (like vim’s E)
history-pager invoke the searchable pager on history (incremental search); or if the history pager is already active, search further backwards in time.
history-delete permanently delete the current history item, either from the history pager or from an active up-arrow history search
history-search-backward search the history for the previous match
history-search-forward search the history for the next match
history-prefix-search-backward search the history for the previous prefix match
history-prefix-search-forward search the history for the next prefix match
history-token-search-backward search the history for the previous matching argument
history-token-search-forward search the history for the next matching argument
history-last-token-search-backward search the history for the previous matching last argument
history-last-token-search-forward search the history for the next matching last argument
forward-jump and backward-jump read another character and jump to its next occurrence after/before the cursor
forward-jump-till and backward-jump-till jump to right before the next occurrence
repeat-jump and repeat-jump-reverse redo the last jump in the same/opposite direction
jump-to-matching-bracket jump to matching bracket if the character under the cursor is bracket; otherwise, jump to the next occurrence of any right bracket after the cursor. The following brackets are considered: ([{}])
jump-till-matching-bracket the same as jump-to-matching-bracket but offset cursor to the right for left bracket, and offset cursor to the left for right bracket. The offset is applied for both the position we jump from and position we jump to. In other words, the cursor will continuously jump inside the brackets but won’t reach them by 1 character. The input function is useful to emulate ib vi text object. The following brackets are considered: ([{}])
kill-token move the next argument to the killring
kill-line move everything from the cursor to the end of the line to the killring
kill-path-component move one path component to the killring.
kill-selection move the selected text to the killring
kill-whole-line move the line (including the following newline) to the killring. If the line is the last line, its preceding newline is also removed
kill-inner-line move the line (without the following newline) to the killring
kill-word move the next word to the killring, stopping after the end of the killed word
kill-word-vi move the next word to the killring, stopping at the start of the next word (like vim’s dw)
kill-bigword move the next whitespace-delimited word to the killring, stopping after the end of the current word
kill-bigword-vi move the next whitespace-delimited word to the killring, stopping at the start of the next word (like vim’s dW)
kill-inner-word delete the word under the cursor (like vim’s diw)
kill-inner-bigword delete the whitespace-delimited word under the cursor (like vim’s diW)
kill-a-word delete the word under the cursor plus surrounding whitespace (like vim’s daw)
kill-a-bigword delete the whitespace-delimited word under the cursor plus surrounding whitespace (like vim’s daW)
nextd-or-forward-word if the commandline is empty, then move forward in the directory history, otherwise move one word to the right; or if at the end of the commandline, accept one word from the current autosuggestion.
or only execute the next function if the previous did not succeed (note: only some functions report failure)
pager-toggle-search toggles the search field if the completions pager is visible; or if used after history-pager, search forwards in time.
prevd-or-backward-word if the commandline is empty, then move backward in the directory history, otherwise move one word to the left
repaint reexecutes the prompt functions and redraws the prompt (also force-repaint for backwards-compatibility)
repaint-mode reexecutes the fish_mode_prompt and redraws the prompt. This is useful for vi mode. If no fish_mode_prompt exists or it prints nothing, it acts like a normal repaint.
self-insert inserts the matching sequence into the command line
self-insert-notfirst inserts the matching sequence into the command line, unless the cursor is at the beginning
get-key sets fish_key to the key that was pressed to trigger this binding. Example use:
for i in (seq 0 9)
bind $i get-key 'commandline -i "#$fish_key"' 'set -eg fish_key'
end
suppress-autosuggestion remove the current autosuggestion. Returns true if there was a suggestion to remove.
swap-selection-start-stop go to the other end of the highlighted text without changing the selection
transpose-chars transpose two characters to the left of the cursor
transpose-words transpose two words to the left of the cursor
togglecase-char toggle the capitalisation (case) of the character under the cursor
togglecase-selection toggle the capitalisation (case) of the selection
insert-line-under add a new line under the current line
insert-line-over add a new line over the current line
up-line move up one line
undo and redo revert or redo the most recent edits on the command line
upcase-word make the current word uppercase
yank insert the latest entry of the killring into the buffer
yank-pop rotate to the previous entry of the killring
The following functions are included as normal functions, but are particularly useful for input editing:
up-or-search and down-or-search move the cursor or search the history depending on the cursor position and current mode
edit_command_buffer open the visual editor (controlled by the VISUAL or EDITOR environment variables) with the current command-line contents
fish_clipboard_copy copy the current selection to the system clipboard
fish_clipboard_paste paste the current selection from the system clipboard before the cursor
fish_commandline_append append the argument to the command-line. If the command-line already ends with the argument, this removes the suffix instead. Starts with the last command from history if the command-line is empty.
fish_commandline_prepend prepend the argument to the command-line. If the command-line already starts with the argument, this removes the prefix instead. Starts with the last command from history if the command-line is empty.
Exit the shell when ctrl-d is pressed:
bind ctrl-d 'exit'
Perform a history search when pageup is pressed:
bind pageup history-search-backward
Turn on vi key bindings and rebind ctrl-c to clear the input line:
set -g fish_key_bindings fish_vi_key_bindings bind -M insert ctrl-c kill-whole-line repaint
Launch git diff and repaint the commandline afterwards when ctrl-g is pressed:
bind ctrl-g 'git diff' repaint
Swap tab and shift-tab, making tab focus the search field. But if the search field is already active, keep the behavior (tab cycles forward, shift-tab backward).:
bind tab '
if commandline --search-field >/dev/null
commandline -f complete
else
commandline -f complete-and-search
end
'
bind shift-tab '
if commandline --search-field >/dev/null
commandline -f complete-and-search
else
commandline -f complete
end
'
Unix terminals, like the ones fish operates in, are at heart 70s technology. They have some limitations that applications running inside them can’t workaround.
For instance, historically the control key modifies a character by setting the top three bits to 0. This means:
\n).Other keys don’t have a direct encoding, and are sent as escape sequences. For example right (→) usually sends \e\[C.
Some modern terminals support newer encodings for keys, that allow distinguishing more characters and modifiers, and fish enables as many of these as it can, automatically.
When in doubt, run fish_key_reader - explore what characters keyboard keys send. If that tells you that pressing ctrl-i sends tab, your terminal does not support these better encodings, and so fish is limited to what it sends.
When you’ve bound a sequence of multiple characters, there is always the possibility that fish has only seen a part of it, and then it needs to disambiguate between the full sequence and part of it.
For example:
bind j,k 'commandline -i foo' # or `bind jk`
will bind the sequence jk to insert “foo” into the commandline. When you’ve only pressed “j”, fish doesn’t know if it should insert the “j” (because of the default self-insert), or wait for the “k”.
You can enable a timeout for this, by setting the fish_sequence_key_delay_ms variable to the timeout in milliseconds. If the timeout elapses, fish will no longer wait for the sequence to be completed, and do what it can with the characters it already has.
The escape key is a special case, because it can be used standalone as a real key or as part of a longer escape sequence, like function or arrow keys. Holding alt and something else also typically sends escape, for example holding alt+a will send an escape character and then an “a”. So the escape character has its own timeout configured with fish_escape_delay_ms.
See also Key sequences.
© 2005-2009 Axel Liljencrantz, 2009-2026 fish-shell contributors
Licensed under the GNU General Public License, version 2.
https://fishshell.com/docs/4.5/cmds/bind.html