![]() ![]() You can always look for other shortcut keys in the iTerm menu. Here’s a set of shortcut keys I commonly use. Under Pointer, in Miscellaneous Settings section, enable “Focus follows mouse”. Under Keys tab, in Hotkey section, enable “Show/hide iTerm2 with a system-wide hotkey” and input your hotkey combination, e.g. panes by holding down the Meta key and by pressing the left arrow key, the right. Alt + b to move to previous word, under Profiles tab, go to Keys subtab, set Left option key acts as: to “+Esc”. iTerm and the stock terminal program on Mac have the choice to use the. To enable Meta key for Bash readline editing e.g. Under Profiles tab, go to General subtab, set Working Directory to “Reuse previous session’s directory”. On the iTerm preferences pane, select keys on the top, then. Open tab/pane with current working directory iTerm2 shortcut screenshot Screenshot of the Restore Window Arrangement iTerm2. Launch iTerm, open iTerm > Preferences or just Cmd +. Give it a try, download and install it from. There is no keyboard shortcut for this according to gitlab issue. + and + If you mean swapping the positions of the panes, it can only be done from the right-click menu: Right-click pane to swap from, it turns red. If you haven’t heard of iTerm, it’s a popular open source alternative to Mac OS X Terminal. If you mean switching focus between panes: + + and + +. ![]() I have been using iTerm in daily work for almost a year now.Īlong the way, I learned a few handy settings tweaks and shortcut keys to boost my productivity in command-line environment. ![]()
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