--- title: "Zsh 5.1 and bracketed paste" date: 2015-09-21T14:40:36-07:00 date-display: September 21, 2015 --- **TL;DR.** Jump to [code](#code). --- In short, Zsh 5.1 introduced bracketed paste mode[^1] and turned it on by default (as it seems to me). It is nice in certain ways — I appreciate the change, yet I was bitten nevertheless. In at least two ways: 1. Most annoyingly, `url-quote-magic` doesn't work anymore when pasting URLs, so for example if I paste https://www.google.com/search?q=zsh without typing in a single or double quote first, the `?` won't be backslash-quoted by default, which causes a syntax error when passed unnoticed (out of habit). 2. The Emacs shell[^2] is littered with `^[[?2004h` and `^[[?2004l` around every prompt. The solution? Zsh now also ships with [`bracketed-paste-magic`](https://github.com/zsh-users/zsh/blob/master/Functions/Zle/bracketed-paste-magic) that solves exactly breakage #1 (and a bit more); to quote comments from the linked source file: > Starting with zsh-5.1, ZLE began to recognize the "bracketed paste" capability of terminal emulators, that is, the sequences `$'\e[200~'` to start a paste and `$'\e[201~'` to indicate the end of the pasted text. Pastes are handled by the bracketed-paste widget and insert literally into the editor buffer rather than being interpreted as keystrokes. > > This disables some common usages where the self-insert widget has been replaced in order to accomplish some extra processing. An example is the contributed url-quote-magic widget. The bracketed-paste-magic widget replaces bracketed-paste with a wrapper that re-enables these self-insert actions, and other actions as selected by the zstyles described below. And to solve breakage #2, just disable bracketed paste altogether for dumb terms.
Putting it together:
```zsh # turn off ZLE bracketed paste in dumb term # otherwise turn on ZLE bracketed-paste-magic if [[ $TERM == dumb ]]; then unset zle_bracketed_paste else autoload -Uz bracketed-paste-magic zle -N bracketed-paste bracketed-paste-magic fi ``` [^1]: Bracketed paste mode is a safeguard against inadvertent interpretation of pasted text, e.g., newline being treated at `accept-line` in Zsh. You may read more about it [in this blog post](https://cirw.in/blog/bracketed-paste), which is somewhat outdated yet still informational. [^2]: I seldom use this dumb (literally) thing, but when I do I expect it to work ungarbled, naturally.