how to paste to vim when using putty

I am using putty to connect a remote host and editing via vim. I meet a trouble when I try to paste something to vim. That's, I copy something to clipboard in my local host and want to paste it to the vim in the remote host. How to do that?

ps: I am using putty! So, I open a vim window via putty. The very need is that I want to copy something in my local host and paste it to the vim editor opened by putty. That's all. Thanks!


Solution 1:

Try with Ctrl + Shift + V or with middle click with a 3 button mouse

EDIT

What about? Shift + Ins

Source : https://superuser.com/questions/180043/paste-the-windows-clipboard-into-my-putty-session-using-only-the-keyboard

Solution 2:

You can insert text from your host’s clipboard by pressing the right mouse button (default setting) or by pressing Shift + Ins. Note that this has the same effect as entering every character manually. So if you are using auto indentation in vim, this will very likely screw up your code.

To fix that, you can do the following:

  1. Before pasting into vim, enable paste mode by entering :set paste.

  2. Press i to enter insert mode. The status bar should say -- INSERT (paste) -- now.

  3. Press the right mouse button to paste in your stuff. The auto indentation of vim should not happen.

    If this puts you into the -- (insert) VISUAL -- mode, exit out of it using Esc (putting you into the paste insert mode again), and try pasting it again while holding Shift using your right mouse button.

  4. Press Esc to leave insert mode, and disable paste mode using :set nopaste again.

You can change which mouse button is used to paste in PuTTY in the Window/Selection configuration page.

Solution 3:

In Windows Subsystem for Linux it appears that you have to:

  1. i = to enter -- INSERT -- mode
  2. Shift-right-mouse-click = to paste

If you just right-mouse-click (i.e. without shift) then annoyingly all that happens is that the mode changes to -- (insert) VISUAL -- i.e. it doesn't paste anything.

Solution 4:

To clarify the other answers, there are a couple ways to do this, depending on if Vim is running with mouse support. Lets assume its via some sort of terminal/Putty:

  • When not using mouse in remote Vim, right clicking will paste from local clipboard via Putty into remote Vim.
  • With mouse enabled in remote Vim, Shift + Ins will paste from local clipboard via putty into remote vim.
  • Ctrl + Shift + v will paste from local clipboard via native/*nixish/xterm into remote vim.
  • With mouse enabled in remote Vim, middle clicking will paste from remote clipboard into remote Vim.