early intuitive, and I've got two consoles permanently
split now with my workspace neatly subdivided to suit my way of working. Just
need to get the vi-key-mappings configured correctly and it's all good.
Keep up the good work and many thanks from a satisfied developer!
Ciao
Richard
-
It sounds to me like you are looking for
ctrl-b, then o # which takes you to the next pane, and the next, etc.
or:
ctrl-b o # (held down together) to move the panes into the current one.
Both are useful.
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than AufWiederSehen!
http
Hi,
Might it be an idea to have an "authors" file, a bit like (I'm familiar with)
Perl. That way the main author/s get their name in lights (of course), but
the little people get a mention also which would encourage contributions in
some small way. Just an idea.
Ciao
Ric
tly, inutitively, an excellent tool!
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than AufWiederSehen!
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
> I don't think I want the extra maintenance hassle of maintaining a file
> manually and I'm not sure there is any evidence it'd encourage
&g
I thought I'd share it. Just FYI.
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than AufWiederSehen!
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
--
uberSVN's rich system and user administration capabilities and model
config
same command. Just an idea,
while we're talking about Vim + tmux, again :-)
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than AufWiederSehen!
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
> Hi,
>
> I often find myself starting up a new session in tmux with the intent of it
> being for a specific
which only put them on hold, might have
common code. Just a thought.
All the same, apologies for confusing the thread.
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than AufWiederSehen!
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
> On 9 August 2011 17:23, Richard Foley wrote:
> > Vim has an ev
rrent tmux
layout in this console, with the appropriate users and directory locations,
etc. Does tmux have this feature yet, I don't think so, but I think it would
be really useful. Perhaps I've missed it in TFM...?
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than AufWiederSehen!
htt
f the gods" ;-)
http://blog.edsantiago.com/articles/tmux-session-preserve/
I'll take another look at that, and if it works, (for me), I'll feedback here.
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than AufWiederSehen!
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
> Not really,
Belay that observation. While this used to happen, a short time later, now
the 'feature' doesn't happen any more. So there must have been something else
going on which I'm unaware of. Apologies for the false positive.
Ciao
Richard
--
Richard Foley
Ciao - shorter than A
Richard Foley
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
On Tue, Aug 23, 2011 at 08:27:00AM +0200, Richard Foley wrote:
> > Hi folks,
> >
> > I'm not sure if this is intentional, but it's useful all the same. When I
> > start up a VM (raw VDS image), I usually get a new GUI wi
Very nice work, Peter.
I presume you've notified P5P, and the perl debugger mailing list, and wider
perl community, of this *highly* interesting release?
--
Ciao
Richard Foley
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
On Fri, Nov 30, 2012 at 12:03:25PM +0400, Peter Vereshagin wrote:
> Hello.
&
switching to Tmux + Vim as we speak.
Basically, I just thought it might be a relevant potential user base to tap.
--
Ciao
Richard Foley
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
On Fri, Nov 30, 2012 at 03:58:43PM +0400, Peter Vereshagin wrote:
> Hello.
>
> No top-posting, please. Thank you.
Thanks for all of your work on Tmux during the year, it's changed my working
life forever (for the good...)
Merry Xmas and a Happy New Year to the Tmux community!
--
Ciao
Richard Foley
http://www.rfi.net/books.html
On Wed, Dec 26, 2012 at 10:05:13AM +, Nicholas Marriott wrote:
>
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