Gary, thanks for your response.

Are you sure &term matches "linux"?


Yes, I'm sure because I do an echo within that "if" block. I also force it
to be "linux", so the Home and End keys work properly. But I've tried other
terminal types too. tmux has "screen-256color" by default on my system.

You might try setting &t_ti and &t_te unconditionally and see if  that
> helps.


No, unfortunately doesn't :(

That said, I'm surprised that this doesn't "just work" for you.


Me too


> I am currently running vim in a tmux window over ssh.  The local terminal
> is GNOME Terminal 2.32.0.  The values of 't_te' and 't_ti' automatically
> set by vim are:



> t_te=^[[?1049l



> t_ti=^[[?1049h



What is your remote operating system?


Debian Linux


> What terminal are you running locally?


I'm connecting from under a VM running Peppermint. The terminal is set to
xterm.


> Before you override them, what does vim say the values of 'term', 't_te'
> and 't_ti' are?


^[[?1049l
^[[?1049h

Thanks again!

On Wed, Nov 26, 2014 at 12:43 AM, Gary Johnson <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 2014-11-25, surge wrote:
> > Hi,
> >
> > If this has been answered, I'm sorry. Please point me to the right
> > post -- I couldn't find much.
> >
> > I'm using tmux through ssh and the screen is not restored upon
> > exiting from vim. No matter what the terminal type and even with
> > these commands in .vimrc:
> >
> > if &term =~ "linux"
> >   let &t_ti = "\<Esc>[?47h"
> >   let &t_te = "\<Esc>[?47l"
> > endif
> >
> > Any ideas?
>
> Are you sure &term matches "linux"?  "linux" is the value of TERM
> set by a Linux console.  Most terminals set TERM to "xterm".  Tmux
> sets TERM to "screen".  (Vim sets &term to $TERM if TERM is set.)
>
> You might try setting &t_ti and &t_te unconditionally and see if
> that helps.
>
> That said, I'm surprised that this doesn't "just work" for you.  I
> am currently running vim in a tmux window over ssh.  The local
> terminal is GNOME Terminal 2.32.0.  The values of 't_te' and 't_ti'
> automatically set by vim are:
>
>   t_te=^[[?1049l
>   t_ti=^[[?1049h
>
> What is your remote operating system?  What terminal are you running
> locally?  Before you override them, what does vim say the values of
> 'term', 't_te' and 't_ti' are?
>
> Regards,
> Gary
>
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