@@ -316,6 +316,12 @@ The Leader/Lead key provides a powerful multi-functional navigation mechanism. I
When the filter is on, <kbd>/</kbd> works as an additional Leader key.
#### Help
$ nnn -h
$ man nnn
To lookup keyboard shortcuts at runtime, press <kbd>?</kbd>.
## Concepts
#### Contexts
@@ -413,12 +419,6 @@ External storage devices can be (un)mounted using the plugin [nmount](https://gi
For auto-mounting external storage drives use udev rules or udisks wrappers.
#### Help
$ nnn -h
$ man nnn
To lookup keyboard shortcuts at runtime, press <kbd>?</kbd>.
## Troubleshooting
##### Tmux configuration
@@ -429,7 +429,7 @@ To lookup keyboard shortcuts at runtime, press <kbd>?</kbd>.
TLDR: Use the keybind <kbd>K</kbd> to toggle selection if you are having issues with <kbd>^Y</kbd>.
By default in OpenBSD & FreeBSD (and probably on macOS as well), `stty` maps <kbd>^Y</kbd> to `DSUSP`. This means that typing <kbd>^Y</kbd> will suspend `nnn` as if you typed <kbd>^Z</kbd> (you can bring `nnn` back to the foreground by issuing `fg`) instead of entering multi-selection mode. You can check this with `stty -a`. If it includes the text `dsusp = ^Y`, issuing `stty dsusp undef` will disable this `DSUSP` and let `nnn` receive the <kbd>^Y</kbd> instead.
On OpenBSD & FreeBSD (and probably on macOS as well) `stty` maps <kbd>^Y</kbd> to `DSUSP` by default. This means that typing <kbd>^Y</kbd> will suspend `nnn` as if you typed <kbd>^Z</kbd> (you can bring `nnn` back to the foreground by issuing `fg`) instead of entering multi-selection mode. You can check this with `stty -a`. If it includes the text `dsusp = ^Y`, issuing `stty dsusp undef` will disable this `DSUSP` and let `nnn` receive the <kbd>^Y</kbd> instead.