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Tip 746 Printable Monobook Previous Next

created 2004 · complexity basic · author legba · version 6.0


Vim allows the cursor shape, blink rate, and color to be customized, if supported by the underlying system. Depending upon your system, you can make the cursor more prominent using blinking and a distinctive color, or you can make the cursor less distracting by disabling blinking and using a bland color. In the GUI (gvim), the cursor can be fully customized. For example, the cursor color can be changed when entering insert mode to clarify whether you are in normal or insert mode.

Changing the cursor color in insert mode

You may start typing, thinking you are in insert mode, but find that the characters are interpreted as commands because you are actually in normal mode. To help avoid that problem, you can specify that the cursor color and blink rate change when entering insert mode.

Using gvim with the defaults, the cursor shape is a block when in n-v-c modes (normal mode, or visual selection mode, or command mode while entering a colon command), and the shape changes to a vertical bar when in i (insert) mode. The color and blink rates do not change.

Here is an example for gvim showing how to customize the cursor properties (see :help 'guicursor'):

highlight Cursor guifg=white guibg=black
highlight iCursor guifg=white guibg=steelblue
set guicursor=n-v-c:block-Cursor
set guicursor+=i:ver100-iCursor
set guicursor+=n-v-c:blinkon0
set guicursor+=i:blinkwait10

Line 1 defines the color highlighting used for n-v-c modes (set in line 3), and line 2 defines a different color for insert mode (set in line 4). Line 5 disables blinking (blinkon value 0) for n-v-c modes, and line 6 increases the default blink rate for insert mode. Line 4 also sets the cursor shape to a 100% sized vertical bar for insert mode (the default is ver25, a 25% vertical bar. When using ver100 vim doesn't take the guifg parameter. It is better to use block instead).

It is possible to change the cursor color and style in the terminal if it understands the following escape sequences. Not all terminals support this, but xterm, rxvt and Terminator do(must use nightly version for Terminator, as stable does not support cursor shape escape codes). Recent versions of gnome-terminal support the sequence to change color, but not the one to restore the color to the default. Add the following to ~/.vimrc:

if &term =~ "xterm\\|rxvt"
  " use an orange cursor in insert mode
  let &t_SI = "\<Esc>]12;orange\x7"
  " use a red cursor otherwise
  let &t_EI = "\<Esc>]12;red\x7"
  silent !echo -ne "\033]12;red\007"
  " reset cursor when vim exits
  autocmd VimLeave * silent !echo -ne "\033]112\007"
  " use \003]12;gray\007 for gnome-terminal and rxvt up to version 9.21
endif

And changing the cursor shape (rxvt only accepts these escape sequences after version 9.21).

if &term =~ '^xterm\\|rxvt'
  " solid underscore
  let &t_SI .= "\<Esc>[4 q"
  " solid block
  let &t_EI .= "\<Esc>[2 q"
  " 1 or 0 -> blinking block
  " 3 -> blinking underscore
  " Recent versions of xterm (282 or above) also support
  " 5 -> blinking vertical bar
  " 6 -> solid vertical bar
endif

Note: when using VIm with xterm on Cygwin use "xterm\|rxvt" (one backslash).

it worked if 'two' backslash - But with "double-quote". (comment by shane - 2019.Sept.26)

If Vim is running in a Gnome-terminal, the cursor shape can be changed as follows:

au InsertEnter * silent execute "!gconftool-2 --type string --set /apps/gnome-terminal/profiles/Default/cursor_shape ibeam"    
au InsertLeave * silent execute "!gconftool-2 --type string --set /apps/gnome-terminal/profiles/Default/cursor_shape block"
au VimLeave * silent execute "!gconftool-2 --type string --set /apps/gnome-terminal/profiles/Default/cursor_shape block"
au VimEnter * silent execute "!gconftool-2 --type string --set /apps/gnome-terminal/profiles/Default/cursor_shape block"

Don't do this! This is using a global setting for a local problem -- it changes the cursor shape in all open gnome-terminal windows, not just the one running vim.

The first two lines change the cursor to ibeam/block as it enters/leaves insert mode, the last 2 lines ensure the terminal cursor is independent of vim cursor setting.

Disabling cursor blinking

The 'guicursor' option can be used to set the cursor properties when working in a GUI (gvim). The following commands illustrate how to disable blinking for all modes (the "a" specifies all modes, and the 0 value for blinkon disables blinking):

" Disable all blinking:
:set guicursor+=a:blinkon0
" Remove previous setting:
:set guicursor-=a:blinkon0
" Restore default setting:
:set guicursor&

You can also enter a command to directly set guicursor to disable blinking for the n-v-c modes. Type the following:

:set guicursor=

then press the Tab key (see :help 'wildchar') to have the current value of 'guicursor' displayed in the command line. You should see something like this (the ... indicates text omitted from this example):

:set guicursor=n-v-c:block-Cursor/lCursor,...

After the first colon, add "blinkon0-" so it reads:

:set guicursor=n-v-c:blinkon0-block-Cursor/lCursor,...

Alternatively, you can use the :let command with the &guicursor variable to set the 'guicursor' option. The following command inserts the "blinkon0-" using a substitute (in the replacement, & represents the original text, that is, 'n-v-c:'):

let &guicursor = substitute(&guicursor, 'n-v-c:', '&blinkon0-', '')

See also

Comments

You need special escape sequence to make it work for tmux. An example setup:

" tmux will only forward escape sequences to the terminal if surrounded by a DCS sequence
if exists('$TMUX')
   " set insert mode to a cyan vertical line   
   let &t_SI .= "\<esc>Ptmux;\<esc>\<esc>[6 q\<esc>\\"
   let &t_SI .= "\<esc>Ptmux;\<esc>\<esc>]12;cyan\x7\<esc>\\"
   " set normal mode to a green block
   let &t_EI .= "\<esc>Ptmux;\<esc>\<esc>[2 q\<esc>\\"
   let &t_EI .= "\<esc>Ptmux;\<esc>\<esc>]12;green\x7\<esc>\\"
   " set replace mode to an orange underscore
   let &t_SR .= "\<esc>Ptmux;\<esc>\<esc>[4 q\<esc>\\"
   let &t_SR .= "\<esc>Ptmux;\<esc>\<esc>]12;orange\x7\<esc>\\"

   " initialize cursor shape/color on startup (silent !echo approach doesn't seem to work for tmux)
   augroup ResetCursorShape
      au!
      "autocmd VimEnter * startinsert | stopinsert
      autocmd VimEnter * normal! :startinsert :stopinsert
      "autocmd VimEnter * :normal :startinsert :stopinsert
   augroup END

   " reset cursor when leaving tmux
   autocmd VimLeave * silent !echo -ne "\033Ptmux;\033\033[2 q\033\\"
   autocmd VimLeave * silent !echo -ne "\033Ptmux;\033\033]12;gray\007\033\\"


In KDE 4.7 Konsole terminal emulator this works for changing cursor color background:

" orange in insert mode, red in command mode
" if you want to use rgb color formatting:
"   konsoleprofile CustomCursorColor=#255255255
autocmd VimEnter * silent !konsoleprofile UseCustomCursorColor=1
let &t_SI = "\<Esc>]50;CustomCursorColor=orange;BlinkingCursorEnabled=1\x7"
let &t_EI = "\<Esc>]50;CustomCursorColor=red;BlinkingCursorEnabled=0\x7"
silent !konsoleprofile CustomCursorColor=red
autocmd VimLeave * silent !konsoleprofile CustomCursorColor=gray;BlinkingCursorEnabled=0

Additionally it's blinking in insert mode but not in command mode. It changes cursor color "back" to gray after leaving Vim.

If it's still not working, check if you set the TERM variable to "xterm-256color" instead of "xterm" in .bashrc for example. --May 5, 2013

For putty I use this in my .vimrc

let &t_SI .= "\e[=1c"
let &t_EI .= "\e[=2c"

 You have to change putty to use the vertical line cursor by default.

 To get the block cursor by default on login, you can use this in your .bashrc or .zshrc :

echo -en "\e[=2c"
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