Why does the terminal show "^[[A" "^[[B" "^[[C" "^[[D" when pressing the arrow keys in Ubuntu?
CUbuntuC Problem Overview
I've written a tiny program in Ansi C on Windows first, and I compiled it on Ubuntu with the built-in GCC now.
The program is simple:
- read the line from console with
scanf()
. - Analyze the string and calculate.
But something weird happens. When I try to move the cursor, it prints four characters:
- pressing Up prints "
^[[A
" - pressing Dn prints "
^[[B
" - pressing Rt prints "
^[[C
" - pressing Lt prints "
^[[D
"
-
How can this be avoided?
-
Why does it print these 4 characters instead of moving the cursor?
C Solutions
Solution 1 - C
Because that's what the keyboard actually sends to the PC (more precisely, what the terminal prints for what it actually receives from the keyboard). bash
for example gets those values, deciphers them and understands that you want to move around, so it will either move the cursor (in case of left/right) or use its history to fetch previous commands (up/down). So you can't expect your program to magically support arrow keys.
However, reading from standard input from the terminal already supports left/right arrow keys (I believe, but I'm not in Linux right now to test and make sure). So my guess is that there is another issue interfering. One possible cause could be that one of your modifier keys is stuck? Perhaps ALT, CTRL or SUPER?
Solution 2 - C
For those who are coming from the osx (mac) try changing the shells to bash
Terminal -> Preferences -> Shells open with -> [select] Command (complete path)
then paste
/bin/bash
Solution 3 - C
This might be because the user account is created in shell. You can change it to bash by two ways.
Permament solution is -
sudo chsh -s /bin/bash ${username}
To get this solution working you will have to logout and login
Temporary solution is everytime when you login into the ubuntu server type bash
and hit return.
Solution 4 - C
On MacOS Terminal for me was enough to uncheck "Scroll alternate screen" for the issue to disappear. See screenshot of the preferences below.
Solution 5 - C
i think simple way is we can just do
kill %%
because this sometimes happen because of background processes.