From zlatko+gmx at zlatk0.net Fri Nov 16 11:17:53 2018 From: zlatko+gmx at zlatk0.net (Thomas Zajic) Date: Fri, 16 Nov 2018 12:17:53 +0100 Subject: Ctrl+J in mc In-Reply-To: References: Message-ID: <1726e6f4-3259-8e77-0445-80fcd33238f7@zlatk0.net> * Ivan Pizhenko via mc-devel, 28.10.18 21:52 > Hi, I'm wondering why following happens: > In Ubuntu and FreeBSD, when I am pressing Ctrl+J in MC, it puts name > of file on which file cursor is currently on. But this doesn't work in > CentOS and RHEL. > How to fix that in CentOS and RHEL? > Ivan. Never heard about Ctrl+j, I always used Alt+Enter for that purpose. Alt+a does the same thing for the path, BTW (just in case you didn't know). :-) HTH, Thomas From ivan.pizhenko at gmail.com Sat Nov 17 15:05:52 2018 From: ivan.pizhenko at gmail.com (Ivan Pizhenko) Date: Sat, 17 Nov 2018 15:05:52 -0000 Subject: Ctrl+J in mc In-Reply-To: <1726e6f4-3259-8e77-0445-80fcd33238f7@zlatk0.net> References: <1726e6f4-3259-8e77-0445-80fcd33238f7@zlatk0.net> Message-ID: Thanks! Didn't know about Alt+Enter. Looks like in Ubuntu Ctrl+J generates Alt+Enter and in RHEL/CentOS just Enter ??, 16 ????. 2018 ? 13:18 Thomas Zajic ????: > > * Ivan Pizhenko via mc-devel, 28.10.18 21:52 > > > Hi, I'm wondering why following happens: > > In Ubuntu and FreeBSD, when I am pressing Ctrl+J in MC, it puts name > > of file on which file cursor is currently on. But this doesn't work in > > CentOS and RHEL. > > How to fix that in CentOS and RHEL? > > Ivan. > > Never heard about Ctrl+j, I always used Alt+Enter for that purpose. > Alt+a does the same thing for the path, BTW (just in case you didn't > know). :-) > > HTH, > Thomas