NANORC(5) File Formats Manual NANORC(5)

nanorc - GNU nano's configuration file

The nanorc files contain the default settings for nano, a small and friendly text editor. During startup, if --rcfile is not given, nano reads two files: first the system-wide settings, from /etc/nanorc (the exact path might be different on your system), and then the user-specific settings, either from ~/.nanorc or from $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nano/nanorc or from ~/.config/nano/nanorc, whichever is encountered first. If --rcfile is given, nano reads just the specified settings file.

Since version 8.0, to be newcomer friendly, ^F starts a forward search, ^B starts a backward search, M-F searches the next occurrence forward, and M-B searches the next occurrence backward. If you want those keystrokes to do what they did before version 8.0, add the following lines at the end of your nanorc file:

bind ^F forward main
bind ^B back main
bind M-F formatter main
bind M-B linter main

The configuration file accepts a series of set and unset commands, which can be used to configure nano on startup without using command-line options. Additionally, there are some commands to define syntax highlighting and to rebind keys -- see the two separate sections on those. nano reads one command per line. All commands and keywords should be written in lowercase.

Options in nanorc files take precedence over nano's defaults, and command-line options override nanorc settings. Also, options that do not take an argument are unset by default. So using the unset command is only needed when wanting to override a setting of the system's nanorc file in your own nanorc. Options that take an argument cannot be unset.

Quotes inside the characters parameters below should not be escaped. The last double quote on the line will be seen as the closing quote.

The supported commands and arguments are:

Make Ctrl+Right and Ctrl+Delete stop at word ends instead of beginnings.
When backing up files, allow the backup to succeed even if its permissions can't be (re)set due to special OS considerations. You should NOT enable this option unless you are sure you need it.
When soft line wrapping is enabled, make it wrap lines at blank characters (tabs and spaces) instead of always at the edge of the screen.
Automatically indent a newly created line to the same number of tabs and/or spaces as the previous line (or as the next line if the previous line is the beginning of a paragraph).
When saving a file, create a backup file by adding a tilde (~) to the file's name.
Make and keep not just one backup file, but make and keep a uniquely numbered one every time a file is saved -- when backups are enabled with set backup or --backup or -B. The uniquely numbered files are stored in the specified directory.
Use bold instead of reverse video for the title bar, status bar, prompt bar, mini bar, key combos, line numbers, and selected text. This can be overridden by setting the options titlecolor, statuscolor, promptcolor, minicolor, keycolor, numbercolor, and/or selectedcolor.
When justifying, treat any line that starts with whitespace as the beginning of a paragraph (unless auto-indenting is on).
Set the characters treated as closing brackets when justifying paragraphs. This may not include blank characters. Only closing punctuation (see set punct), optionally followed by the specified closing brackets, can end sentences. The default value is ""')>]}".
Automatically hard-wrap the current line when it becomes overlong.
Do case-sensitive searches by default.
When a filename given on the command line ends in a colon plus digits and this filename does not exist, then snip the colon plus digits and understand the digits as a line number. If the trimmed filename does not exist either, then repeat the process and understand the obtained two numbers as line and column number. But if the doubly trimmed filename does not exist either, then forget the trimming and accept the original filename as is. To disable this colon parsing for some file, use +1 or similar before the relevant filename.
Constantly display the cursor position in the status bar. This overrides the option quickblank.
Use cut-from-cursor-to-end-of-line by default, instead of cutting the whole line.
Do not use the line below the title bar, leaving it entirely blank.
Use this color combination for the status bar when an error message is displayed. The default value is bold,white,red. See set titlecolor for valid color names.
Set the target width for justifying and automatic hard-wrapping at this number of columns. If the value is 0 or less, wrapping occurs at the width of the screen minus number columns, allowing the wrap point to vary along with the width of the screen if the screen is resized. The default value is -8.
Use this color combination for the concise function descriptions in the two help lines at the bottom of the screen. See set titlecolor for more details.
Draw a vertical stripe at the given column, to help judge the width of the text. (The color of the stripe can be changed with set stripecolor.)
Save the last hundred search strings and replacement strings and executed commands, so they can be easily reused in later sessions.
Display a "scrollbar" on the righthand side of the edit window. It shows the position of the viewport in the buffer and how much of the buffer is covered by the viewport.
Scroll the buffer contents per half-screen instead of per line.
Use this color combination for the shortcut key combos in the two help lines at the bottom of the screen. See set titlecolor for more details.
Display line numbers to the left of the text area. (Any line with an anchor additionally gets a mark in the margin.)
Enable vim-style lock-files for when editing files.
When neither the file's name nor its first line give a clue, try using libmagic to determine the applicable syntax. (Calling libmagic can be relatively time consuming. It is therefore not done by default.)
Specify the opening and closing brackets that can be found by bracket searches. This may not include blank characters. The opening set must come before the closing set, and the two sets must be in the same order. The default value is "(<[{)>]}".
Suppress the title bar and instead show information about the current buffer at the bottom of the screen, in the space for the status bar. In this "mini bar" the filename is shown on the left, followed by an asterisk if the buffer has been modified. On the right are displayed the current line and column number, the code of the character under the cursor (in Unicode format: U+xxxx), the same flags as are shown by set stateflags, and a percentage that expresses how far the cursor is into the file (linewise). When a file is loaded or saved, and also when switching between buffers, the number of lines in the buffer is displayed after the filename. This number is cleared upon the next keystroke, or replaced with an [i/n] counter when multiple buffers are open. The line plus column numbers and the character code are displayed only when set constantshow is used, and can be toggled on and off with M-C. The state flags are displayed only when set stateflags is used.
Use this color combination for the mini bar. (When this option is not specified, the colors of the title bar are used.) See set titlecolor for more details.
Enable mouse support, if available for your system. When enabled, mouse clicks can be used to place the cursor, set the mark (with two clicks), and execute shortcuts. The mouse works in the X Window System, and on the console when gpm is running. Text can still be selected through dragging by holding down the Shift key.
When reading in a file with ^R, insert it into a new buffer by default.
Don't convert files from DOS/Mac format.
Don't display the two help lines at the bottom of the screen.
Don't automatically add a newline when a text does not end with one. (This can cause you to save non-POSIX text files.)
Deprecated option since it has become the default setting. When needed, use unset breaklonglines instead.
Use this color combination for line numbers. See set titlecolor for more details.
nano only reads and writes files inside directory and its subdirectories. Also, the current directory is changed to here, so files are inserted from this directory. By default, the operating directory feature is turned off.
Save the cursor position of files between editing sessions. The cursor position is remembered for the 200 most-recently edited files.
Preserve the XOFF and XON sequences (^S and ^Q) so that they are caught by the terminal (stopping and resuming the output).
Use this color combination for the prompt bar. (When this option is not specified, the colors of the title bar are used.) See set titlecolor for more details.
Set the characters treated as closing punctuation when justifying paragraphs. This may not include blank characters. Only the specified closing punctuation, optionally followed by closing brackets (see brackets), can end sentences. The default value is "!.?".
Make status-bar messages disappear after 1 keystroke instead of after 20. Note that option constantshow overrides this. When option minibar or zero is in effect, quickblank makes a message disappear after 0.8 seconds instead of after the default 1.5 seconds.
Set the regular expression for matching the quoting part of a line. The default value is "^([ \t]*([!#%:;>|}]|//))+". (Note that \t stands for an actual Tab character.) This makes it possible to rejustify blocks of quoted text when composing email, and to rewrap blocks of line comments when writing source code.
Interpret escape sequences directly, instead of asking ncurses to translate them. (If you need this option to get some keys to work properly, it means that the terminfo terminal description that is used does not fully match the actual behavior of your terminal. This can happen when you ssh into a BSD machine, for example.) Using this option disables nano's mouse support.
Interpret the Delete and Backspace keys differently so that both Backspace and Delete work properly. You should only use this option when on your system either Backspace acts like Delete or Delete acts like Backspace.
Do regular-expression searches by default. Regular expressions in nano are of the extended type (ERE).
Save a changed buffer automatically on exit (^X); don't prompt.
Use this color combination for the indicator alias "scrollbar". See set titlecolor for more details.
Use this color combination for selected text. See set titlecolor for more details.
Put the cursor on the highlighted item in the file browser, and show the cursor in the help viewer, to aid braille users and people with poor vision.
Make the Home key smarter. When Home is pressed anywhere but at the very beginning of non-whitespace characters on a line, the cursor jumps to that beginning (either forwards or backwards). If the cursor is already at that position, it jumps to the true beginning of the line.
Display lines that exceed the screen's width over multiple screen lines. (You can make this soft-wrapping occur at whitespace instead of rudely at the screen's edge, by using also set atblanks.)
Use the given program to do spell checking and correcting, instead of using the built-in corrector that calls hunspell(1) or spell(1).
Use this color combination for highlighting a search match. The default value is black,lightyellow. See set titlecolor for valid color names.
Use the top-right corner of the screen for showing some state flags: I when auto-indenting, M when the mark is on, L when hard-wrapping (breaking long lines), R when recording a macro, and S when soft-wrapping. When the buffer is modified, a star (*) is shown after the filename in the center of the title bar.
Use this color combination for the status bar. See set titlecolor for more details.
Use this color combination for the vertical guiding stripe. See set titlecolor for more details.
Use a tab size of number columns. The value of number must be greater than 0. The default value is 8.
Convert each typed tab to spaces -- to the number of spaces that a tab at that position would take up. (Note: pasted tabs are not converted.)
Use this color combination for the title bar. Valid names for the foreground and background colors are: red, green, blue, magenta, yellow, cyan, white, and black. Each of these eight names may be prefixed with the word light to get a brighter version of that color. The word grey or gray may be used as a synonym for lightblack. On a Linux console, light does not have any effect for a background color. On terminal emulators that can do at least 256 colors, other valid (but unprefixable) color names are: pink, purple, mauve, lagoon, mint, lime, peach, orange, latte, rosy, beet, plum, sea, sky, slate, teal, sage, brown, ocher, sand, tawny, brick, crimson, and normal -- where normal means the default foreground or background color. On such emulators, the color may also be specified as a three-digit hexadecimal number prefixed with #, with the digits representing the amounts of red, green, and blue, respectively. This tells nano to select from the available palette the color that approximates the given values.

Either "fgcolor" or ",bgcolor" may be left out, and the pair may be preceded by bold and/or italic (separated by commas) to get a bold and/or slanting typeface, if your terminal can do those.

Remove trailing whitespace from wrapped lines when automatic hard-wrapping occurs or when text is justified.
Save a file by default in Unix format. This overrides nano's default behavior of saving a file in the format that it had. (This option has no effect when you also use set noconvert.)
Set the two characters used to indicate the presence of tabs and spaces. They must be single-column characters. The default pair for a UTF-8 locale is "»⋅", and for other locales ">.".
Detect word boundaries differently by treating punctuation characters as parts of words.
Specify which other characters (besides the normal alphanumeric ones) should be considered as parts of words. When using this option, you probably want to unset wordbounds.
Let an unmodified Backspace or Delete erase the marked region (instead of a single character, and without affecting the cutbuffer).
Hide all elements of the interface (title bar, status bar, and help lines) and use all rows of the terminal for showing the contents of the buffer. The status bar appears only when there is a significant message, and disappears after 1.5 seconds or upon the next keystroke. With M-Z the title bar plus status bar can be toggled. With M-X the help lines.

Coloring the different syntactic elements of a file is done via regular expressions (see the color command below). This is inherently imperfect, because regular expressions are not powerful enough to fully parse a file. Nevertheless, regular expressions can do a lot and are easy to make, so they are a good fit for a small editor like nano.

All regular expressions in nano are POSIX extended regular expressions. This means that ., ?, *, +, ^, $, and several other characters are special. The period . matches any single character, ? means the preceding item is optional, * means the preceding item may be matched zero or more times, + means the preceding item must be matched one or more times, ^ matches the beginning of a line, and $ the end, \< matches the start of a word, and \> the end, and \s matches a blank. It also means that lookahead and lookbehind are not possible. A complete explanation can be found in the manual page of GNU grep: man grep.

Each regular expression in a nanorc file should be wrapped in double quotes (""). Multiple regular expressions can follow each other on a line by separating them with blanks. This means that a regular expression cannot contain a double quote followed by a blank. When you need this combination inside a regular expression, then either the double quote or the blank should be put between square brackets ([]).

For each kind of file a separate syntax can be defined via the following commands:

Start the definition of a syntax with this name. All subsequent color and other such commands are added to this syntax, until a new syntax command is encountered.

When nano is run, this syntax is automatically activated (for the relevant buffer) if the absolute filename matches the extended regular expression fileregex. Or the syntax can be explicitly activated (for all buffers) by using the -Y or --syntax command-line option followed by the name.

The syntax default is special: it takes no fileregex, and applies to files that don't match any syntax's regexes. The syntax none is reserved; specifying it on the command line is the same as not having a syntax at all.

If from all defined syntaxes no fileregex matched, then compare this regex (or regexes) against the first line of the current file, to determine whether this syntax should be used for it.
If no fileregex matched and no header regex matched either, then compare this regex (or regexes) against the result of querying the magic database about the current file, to determine whether this syntax should be used for it. (This querying is done only when libmagic is actually installed on the system and --magic or set magic was given.)
Run the given program on the full contents of the current buffer.
Use the given program to run a syntax check on the current buffer.
comment "string"
Use the given string for commenting and uncommenting lines. If the string contains a vertical bar or pipe character (|), this designates bracket-style comments; for example, "/*|*/" for CSS files. The characters before the pipe are prepended to the line and the characters after the pipe are appended at the end of the line. If no pipe character is present, the full string is prepended; for example, "#" for Python files. If empty double quotes are specified, the comment/uncomment function is disabled; for example, "" for JSON. The default value is "#".
Make the <Tab> key produce the given string. Useful for languages like Python that want to see only spaces for indentation. This overrides the setting of the tabstospaces option.
Paint all pieces of text that match the extended regular expression regex with the given foreground and background colors, at least one of which must be specified. Valid color names are: red, green, blue, magenta, yellow, cyan, white, and black. Each of these eight names may be prefixed with the word light to get a brighter version of that color. The word grey or gray may be used as a synonym for lightblack. On a Linux console, light does not have any effect for a background color. On terminal emulators that can do at least 256 colors, other valid (but unprefixable) color names are: pink, purple, mauve, lagoon, mint, lime, peach, orange, latte, rosy, beet, plum, sea, sky, slate, teal, sage, brown, ocher, sand, tawny, brick, crimson, and normal -- where normal means the default foreground or background color. On such emulators, the color may also be specified as a three-digit hexadecimal number prefixed with #, with the digits representing the amounts of red, green, and blue, respectively. This tells nano to select from the available palette the color that approximates the given values.

The color pair may be preceded by bold and/or italic (separated by commas) to get a bold and/or slanting typeface, if your terminal can do those.

All coloring commands are applied in the order in which they are specified, which means that later commands can recolor stuff that was colored earlier.

Same as above, except that the matching is case insensitive.
Paint all pieces of text whose start matches extended regular expression fromrx and whose end matches extended regular expression torx with the given foreground and background colors, at least one of which must be specified. This means that, after an initial instance of fromrx, all text until the first instance of torx is colored. This allows syntax highlighting to span multiple lines.
Same as above, except that the matching is case insensitive.
Read in self-contained color syntaxes from syntaxfile. Note that syntaxfile may contain only the above commands, from syntax to icolor.
Extend the syntax previously defined as name with another command. This allows adding a new color, icolor, header, magic, formatter, linter, comment, or tabgives command to an already defined syntax -- useful when you want to slightly improve a syntax defined in one of the system-installed files (which normally are not writable).

Key bindings can be changed via the following three commands:

Rebinds the given key to the given function in the given menu (or in all menus where the function exists when all is used).
Makes the given key produce the given string in the given menu (or in all menus where the key exists when all is used). Besides literal text and/or control codes, the string may contain function names between braces. These functions are invoked when the key is typed. To include a literal opening brace, use {{}.
Unbinds the given key from the given menu (or from all menus where the key exists when all is used).

Note that bind key "{function}" menu is equivalent to bind key function menu, except that for the latter form nano checks the availability of the function in the given menu at startup time (and report an error if it does not exist there), whereas for the first form nano checks at execution time that the function exists but not whether it makes any sense in the current menu. The user has to take care that a function name between braces (or any sequence of them) is appropriate. Strange behavior can result when it is not.

^X
where X is a Latin letter, or one of several ASCII characters (@, ], \, ^, _), or the word "Space". Example: ^C.
where X is any ASCII character except [, or the word "Space". Example: M-8.
where X is a Latin letter. Example: Sh-M-U. By default, each Meta+letter keystroke does the same as the corresponding Shift+Meta+letter. But when any Shift+Meta bind is made, that will no longer be the case, for all letters.
where N is a numeric value from 1 to 24. Example: F10. (Often, F13 to F24 can be typed as F1 to F12 with Shift.)

Rebinding ^M (Enter) or ^I (Tab) is probably not a good idea. Rebinding ^[ (Esc) is not possible, because its keycode is the starter byte of Meta keystrokes and escape sequences. Rebinding any of the dedicated cursor-moving keys (the arrows, Home, End, PageUp and PageDown) is not possible. On some terminals it's not possible to rebind ^H (unless --raw is used) because its keycode is identical to that of the Backspace key.

Invokes the help viewer.
Cancels the current command.
Exits from the program (or from the help viewer or file browser).
Writes the current buffer to disk, asking for a name.
Writes the current file to disk without prompting.
Inserts a file into the current buffer (at the current cursor position), or into a new buffer when option multibuffer is set.
Starts a forward search for text in the current buffer -- or for filenames matching a string in the current list in the file browser.
Starts a backward search for text in the current buffer -- or for filenames matching a string in the current list in the file browser.
Searches the next occurrence in the backward direction.
Searches the next occurrence in the forward direction.
Interactively replaces text within the current buffer.
Cuts and stores the current line (or the marked region).
Copies the current line (or the marked region) without deleting it.
Pastes the currently stored text into the current buffer at the current cursor position.
Throws away the current line (or the marked region). (This function is bound by default to <Meta+Delete>.)
Deletes from the cursor position to the beginning of the preceding word. (This function is bound by default to <Shift+Ctrl+Delete>. If your terminal produces ^H for <Ctrl+Backspace>, you can make <Ctrl+Backspace> delete the word to the left of the cursor by rebinding ^H to this function.)
Deletes from the cursor position to the beginning of the next word. (This function is bound by default to <Ctrl+Delete>.)
Cuts all text from the cursor position till the end of the buffer.
Sets the mark at the current position, to start selecting text. Or, when it is set, unsets the mark.
Reports the current position of the cursor in the buffer: the line, column, and character positions.
Counts and reports on the status bar the number of lines, words, and characters in the current buffer (or in the marked region).
Prompts for a program to execute. The program's output is inserted into the current buffer (or into a new buffer when M-F is toggled).
Invokes a spell-checking program, either the default hunspell(1) or GNU spell(1), or the one defined by --speller or set speller.
Invokes a full-buffer-processing program (if the active syntax defines one). (The current buffer is written out to a temporary file, the program is run on it, and then the temporary file is read back in, replacing the contents of the buffer.)
Invokes a syntax-checking program (if the active syntax defines one). If this program produces lines of the form "filename:linenum:charnum: some message", then the cursor is put at the indicated position in the mentioned file while showing "some message" on the status bar. You can move from message to message with <PgUp> and <PgDn>, and leave linting mode with ^C or <Enter>.
Justifies the current paragraph (or the marked region). A paragraph is a group of contiguous lines that, apart from possibly the first line, all have the same indentation. The beginning of a paragraph is detected by either this lone line with a differing indentation or by a preceding blank line.
Justifies the entire current buffer (or the marked region).
Indents (shifts to the right) the current line or the marked lines.
Unindents (shifts to the left) the current line or the marked lines.
Comments or uncomments the current line or the marked lines, using the comment style specified in the active syntax.
Completes (when possible) the fragment before the cursor to a full word found elsewhere in the current buffer.
Goes left one position (in the editor or browser).
Goes right one position (in the editor or browser).
Goes one line up (in the editor or browser).
Goes one line down (in the editor or browser).
Scrolls the viewport up one row (meaning that the text slides down) while keeping the cursor in the same text position, if possible. (This function is bound by default to <Alt+Up>. If <Alt+Up> does nothing on your Linux console, see the FAQ: https://nano-editor.org/dist/latest/faq.html#4.1.)
Scrolls the viewport down one row (meaning that the text slides up) while keeping the cursor in the same text position, if possible. (This function is bound by default to <Alt+Down>.)
Scrolls the line with the cursor to the middle of the viewport.
Scrolls the line with the cursor first to the middle of the viewport, then to the top, then to the bottom.
Moves the cursor to the beginning of the previous word.
Moves the cursor to the beginning of the next word.
Moves the cursor to the beginning of the current line.
Moves the cursor to the end of the current line.
Moves the cursor to the beginning of the current paragraph.
Moves the cursor to the end of the current paragraph.
Moves the cursor to the beginning of the current or preceding block of text. (Blocks are separated by one or more blank lines.)
Moves the cursor to the beginning of the next block of text.
Moves the cursor to the first row in the viewport.
Moves the cursor to the last row in the viewport.
Goes up one screenful.
Goes down one screenful.
Goes to the first line of the file.
Goes to the last line of the file.
Goes to a specific line (and column if specified). Negative numbers count from the end of the file (and end of the line).
Moves the cursor to the bracket (or brace or parenthesis, etc.) that matches (pairs) with the one under the cursor. See set matchbrackets.
Places an anchor at the current line, or removes it when already present. (An anchor is visible when line numbers are activated.)
Goes to the first anchor before the current line.
Goes to the first anchor after the current line.
Switches to editing/viewing the previous buffer when multiple buffers are open.
Switches to editing/viewing the next buffer when multiple buffers are open.
Inserts the next keystroke verbatim into the file, or begins Unicode input when a hexadecimal digit is typed.
Inserts a tab at the current cursor location.
Inserts a new line below the current one.
Deletes the character under the cursor.
Deletes the character before the cursor.
Starts the recording of keystrokes -- the keystrokes are stored as a macro. When already recording, the recording is stopped.
Replays the keystrokes of the last recorded macro.
Undoes the last performed text action (add text, delete text, etc).
Redoes the last undone action (i.e., it undoes an undo).
Refreshes the screen.
Suspends the editor and returns control to the shell (until you tell the process to resume execution with fg).
Toggles whether searching/replacing ignores or respects the case of the given characters.
Toggles whether searching/replacing uses literal strings or regular expressions.
Toggles whether searching/replacing goes forward or backward.
Retrieves the previous (earlier) entry at a prompt.
Retrieves the next (later) entry at a prompt.
Toggles between searching for something and replacing something.
Toggles between searching for text and targeting a line number.
Switches from inserting a file to executing a command.
When executing a command, toggles whether the current buffer (or marked region) is piped to the command.
Toggles between inserting into the current buffer and into a new empty buffer.
When reading in a file, toggles between converting and not converting it from DOS/Mac format. Converting is the default.
When writing a file, switches to writing a DOS format (CR/LF).
When writing a file, switches to writing a Mac format.
When writing a file, appends to the end instead of overwriting.
When writing a file, 'prepends' (writes at the beginning) instead of overwriting.
When writing a file, creates a backup of the current file.
When about to write a file, discard the current buffer without saving. (This function is bound by default only when option --saveonexit is in effect.)
Starts the file browser (in the Read File and Write Out menus), allowing to select a file from a list.
Goes to a directory to be specified, allowing to browse anywhere in the filesystem.
Goes to the first file in the list when using the file browser.
Goes to the last file in the list when using the file browser.
Toggles the presence of the two-line list of key bindings at the bottom of the screen. (This toggle is special: it is available in all menus except the help viewer and the linter. All further toggles are available in the main menu only.)
Toggles the presence of title bar and status bar.
Toggles the constant display of the current line, column, and character positions.
Toggles the displaying of overlong lines on multiple screen lines.
Toggles the display of line numbers in front of the text.
Toggles the showing of whitespace.
Toggles syntax highlighting.
Toggles the smartness of the Home key.
Toggles whether a newly created line will contain the same amount of leading whitespace as the preceding line -- or as the next line if the preceding line is the beginning of a paragraph.
Toggles whether cutting text cuts the whole line or just from the current cursor position to the end of the line.
Toggles whether the overlong part of a line is hard-wrapped to the next line.
Toggles whether typed tabs are converted to spaces.
Toggles mouse support.
The main editor window where text is entered and edited.
The help-viewer menu.
The search menu (AKA whereis).
The 'search to replace' menu.
The 'replace with' menu, which comes up after 'search to replace'.
The 'yesno' menu, where the Yes/No/All/Cancel question is asked.
The 'goto line (and column)' menu.
The 'write file' menu.
The 'insert file' menu.
The 'file browser' menu, for selecting a file to be opened or inserted or written to.
The 'search for a file' menu in the file browser.
The 'go to directory' menu in the file browser.
The menu for inserting the output from an external command, or for filtering the buffer (or the marked region) through an external command, or for executing one of several tools.
The menu of the integrated spell checker where the user can edit a misspelled word.
The linter menu, which allows jumping through the linting messages.
A special name that encompasses all menus. For bind it means all menus where the specified function exists; for unbind it means all menus where the specified key exists.

To make Ctrl+Z suspend nano:

bind ^Z suspend main

To make Shift+Alt+C copy the marked region to the system's clipboard:

bind Sh-M-C "{execute}| xsel -ib {enter}{undo}" main

/etc/nanorc
System-wide configuration file.
~/.nanorc or $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/nano/nanorc or ~/.config/nano/nanorc
Per-user configuration file.
/usr/share/nano/*
Syntax definitions for the syntax coloring of common file types (and for less common file types in the extra/ subdirectory).

nano(1)

An overview of the default key bindings.
version 8.2 September 2024