![]() Linux operating systems tend to fill the global configuration file with all sorts of vim options that turn on "friendlier" behaviours that deviate from that of original vi. ![]() The behaviour that you are complaining about is in fact the behaviour of the original vi. Note that the default if you bring up vim in vi-compatible mode is for the backspace variable to be the empty string. And this is probably in a global configuration file. On one machine you (most probably) have that set to the empty string, and on another you have it set to include the value start. Specifically, it is vim's backspace setting. ![]() It's a simple configuration thing, as the operation of backspace in insert mode is ordinary vim configurable behaviour. This is nothing to do with the shell, or with the version of vim.
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