I have noticed that when I start the day and open vim, then use :Exp, I get the "Press ENTER or type command to continue" prompt. Usually this is shown when an external command is executed. I don't remember :Exp doing this in the past(?). Further, the prompt is only displayed upon the first use of netrw?!
Although trivial, I find this annoying. Does anyone have an idea why netrw is doing this? I have been removing various things in my .vimrc to see if they change anything, but I could be here a long time...
Steps to reproduce:
The contents of v:scrollstart
can be used to get a clue of why this is happening.
There are some options that may be related to the problem. From vim-faq:
Vim will prompt you with the "hit enter to continue" prompt, if there are
some messages on the screen for you to read and the screen is about to be
redrawn. You can add the 'T' flag to the 'shortmess' option to truncate
all messages. This will help in avoiding the hit-enter prompt:
:set shortmess+=T
You can also increase the command height by setting the 'cmdheight' option:
:set cmdheight=2
For more information, read
hit-enter
avoid-hit-enter
'shortmess'
'cmdheight'
Edit:
From :h netrw-problems
:
P10. I'm being pestered with "[something] is a directory" and
"Press ENTER or type command to continue" prompts...
The "[something] is a directory" prompt is issued by Vim,
not by netrw, and there appears to be no way to work around
it. Coupled with the default cmdheight of 1, this message
causes the "Press ENTER..." prompt. So: read |hit-enter|;
I also suggest that you set your |'cmdheight'| to 2 (or more) in
your <.vimrc> file.
You should also check if you are using the latest plugin version, as there is a bug fix on version 71 that is related to your problem:
v71: * bugfix -- made some "set nomodifiable"s into
:
:
* When ch=1, on the second and subsequent uses of
browsing Netrw would issue a blank line to clear
the echo'd messages. This caused an annoying
"Hit-Enter" prompt; now a blank line message
is echo'd only if &ch>1.
Adding this line to ~/.vimrc
seems to resolve the issue for me:
let g:netrw_silent = 1
I usually just do :e .
to browse in current directory. Also, to get rid of prompts you can do :silent Exp
.
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