Sometimes, a graphical text editor like gedit
or kate
cannot be used (because you're in a virtual console for example). Luckily, there are text editors for the terminal. An easy one is nano
, but I cannot understand how to work with it.
If I start nano
by running nano
, the bottom text is supposed to help me but all I see are things like ^G Get Help ^O WriteOut
.
- How can I open text files for editing?
- How can I save the file?
- How can I quit the editor without saving the changes?
- How to edit? I heard that you've to enter some commands to begin editing in
vi
, is this true fornano
too? - Sometimes, if I manage to open a file, the text is unreadable due to its colors. How can I disable these colors? (see the image below)
- In the some files, lines are truncated because those do not fit in the screen. How can I prevent that from happening? (see the image below)
Ctrl + G will let you read the help.
nano
can do some pretty nice things so you might want to pootle around in there for a bit.When you see
^G
(et al) it means Ctrl + G. In the help pages,M-H
means Alt + H.How can I open text files for editing?
This is the default in
nano
. Open and file and you're set to start editing:Note: you won't be able to save unless you have write permissions for that file.
How can I save the file?
F3 will let you save without exiting. Otherwise, Ctrl + X will prompt you if you've made changes. Press Y when it asks, and Enter to confirm the filename.
How can I quit the editor without saving the changes?
Ctrl + X, then N when it asks if you want to save.
How to edit? I heard that you've to enter some commands to begin editing in vi, is this true for nano too?
As above, no.
nano
is simple. It drops you in edit mode as soon as it opens. You can use arrow keys, Page Up / Page Down and Home / End as in gedit. You cannot use the mouse for moving the cursor position.Sometimes, if I manage to open a file, the text is unreadable due to its colors. How can I disable these colors?
Colours are loaded through the nanorc framework. These are files that are loaded when nano loads which basically spell out the syntax highlighting. To toggle syntax highlighting, press Alt + Y. To disable it permanently for certain file types, edit
/etc/nanorc
and put a hash mark (#
) beforeinclude "/usr/share/nano/*.nanorc"
.In the some files, lines are truncated because those do not fit in the screen. How can I prevent that from happening?
Well I've been trying to find something but the best I could see was enabling soft-line-wrap with the funky key-combination of: Alt + $ (Alt + Shift + 4). To enable soft line wrapping by default, add the below line to
~/.nanorc
:More information about this configuration file can be found at
man nanorc
.In the bottom text the
^
stands forCtrl
andM-
stands forAlt
So
^G
isCtrl-G
andM-Y
isAlt-Y
(that one toggles the colors).You can toggle line truncation with
M-$
. See the help pages (^G
) for more functions.The combination of
^
and a letter means you're supposed to press Ctrl and that letter. So when nano says^X Exit
that means you're gonna quit nano by pressing Ctrl+X.To open a file called
/etc/nanorc
you can start nano with:Note that
/etc/groups
is not writeable by regular users, therefore you needsudo
:If you've already opened
nano
, you can press Ctrl+R to open a file.n
for no in the Ctrl+X dialogue..nanorc
in your home directory along with other options. Alt+Y toggles it..nanorc
you can add the lineset fill 80
which will break long lines at 80 characters length. Alt+M toggles it.Here is a list of stettings you can configure in
.nanorc
.CtrlX: Exit the editor. If you've edited text without saving, you'll be prompted as to whether you really want to exit.
CtrlO: Write (output) the current contents of the text buffer to a file. A filename prompt will appear; press CtrlT to open the file navigator shown above.
CtrlR: Read a text file into the current editing session. At the filename prompt, hit CtrlT for the file navigator.
CtrlK: Cut a line into the clipboard. You can press this repeatedly to copy multiple lines, which are then stored as one chunk.
CtrlJ: Justify (fill out) a paragraph of text. By default, this reflows text to match the width of the editing window.
CtrlU: Uncut text, or rather, paste it from the clipboard. Note that after a Justify operation, this turns into unjustify.
CtrlT: Check spelling.
CtrlW: Find a word or phrase. At the prompt, use the cursor keys to go through previous search terms, or hit CtrlR to move into replace mode. Alternatively you can hit CtrlT to go to a specific line.
CtrlC: Show current line number and file information.
CtrlG: Get help; this provides information on navigating through files and common keyboard commands.
You are asking that question because you are used to modern text editors with Ctrl+x, Ctrl+c, Ctrl+v, Ctrl+z, and marking using shift+arrows. You can quickly transform your ugly nano into a modern CLI editor.
Just create the file ~/.nanorc with these key bindings:
It will become something really close to micro editor, but with a tiny footprint.