Revert token movement bindings

Comments by macOS users have shown that, apparently, on that platform
this isn't wanted.

The functions are there for people to use,
but we need more time to figure out if and how we're going to bind
these by default.
For example, we could change these bindings depending on the OS in future.

This reverts most of commit 6af96a81a8.

Fixes #10926
See #11107
This commit is contained in:
Fabian Boehm
2025-02-05 19:06:37 +01:00
parent 04151d758b
commit 378f452eaa
4 changed files with 6 additions and 6 deletions

View File

@@ -303,7 +303,7 @@ Some bindings are common across Emacs and vi mode, because they aren't text edit
- :kbd:`alt-enter` inserts a newline at the cursor position. This is useful to add a line to a commandline that's already complete.
- :kbd:`alt-left` (````) and :kbd:`alt-right` (````) move the cursor one argument left or right, or moves forward/backward in the directory history if the command line is empty. If the cursor is already at the end of the line, and an autosuggestion is available, :kbd:`alt-right` (````) (or :kbd:`alt-f`) accepts the first argument in the suggestion.
- :kbd:`alt-left` (````) and :kbd:`alt-right` (````) move the cursor one word left or right (to the next space or punctuation mark), or moves forward/backward in the directory history if the command line is empty. If the cursor is already at the end of the line, and an autosuggestion is available, :kbd:`alt-right` (````) (or :kbd:`alt-f`) accepts the first word in the suggestion.
- :kbd:`ctrl-left` (````) and :kbd:`ctrl-right` (````) move the cursor one word left or right. These accept one word of the autosuggestion - the part they'd move over.
@@ -368,7 +368,7 @@ To enable emacs mode, use :doc:`fish_default_key_bindings <cmds/fish_default_key
- :kbd:`delete` or :kbd:`backspace` or :kbd:`ctrl-h` removes one character forwards or backwards respectively.
- :kbd:`ctrl-backspace` removes one word backwards and :kbd:`alt-backspace` removes one argument backwards.
- :kbd:`alt-backspace` removes one word backwards. If supported by the terminal, :kbd:`ctrl-backspace` does the same.
- :kbd:`alt-<` moves to the beginning of the commandline, :kbd:`alt->` moves to the end.