Hi Thomas, et al,
Thanks for putting me right on this one. It is indeed a Vim plugin called
ZoomWin, and it's very useful too. This is exactly what I meant, even if it
wasn't what you meant. Perhaps you could do both? I mean a command which
killed all the windows, and a command which only p
On 9 August 2011 17:23, Richard Foley wrote:
> Vim has an even more (imho) cool function than that which would be even more
> (imho) cool to implement. That is if, in Vim, you have a number of buffers
> open at the same time, (eg; your window is split into several panes,
> horizontally and vertic
On Tue, Aug 9, 2011 at 11:23 AM, Richard Foley wrote:
> Vim has an even more (imho) cool function than that which would be even more
> (imho) cool to implement. That is if, in Vim, you have a number of buffers
> open at the same time, (eg; your window is split into several panes,
> horizontally a
Vim has an even more (imho) cool function than that which would be even more
(imho) cool to implement. That is if, in Vim, you have a number of buffers
open at the same time, (eg; your window is split into several panes,
horizontally and vertically), you can make one buffer expand to the entire
I think a flag to kill-window would be better than a new command but
otherwise concept seems fine to me.
On Fri, Aug 05, 2011 at 12:17:03AM +0100, Thomas Adam wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I often find myself starting up a new session in tmux with the intent of it
> being for a specific purpose, and naming i