How can I close all buffers in Vim except the one I am currently editing?
21 Answers
I was able to do this pretty easily like this:
:%bd|e#
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5This is a nice answer. It makes BufOnly feel a bit overkill (I mean, a whole plugin?) unless you're using the argument passing feature of BufOnly. All I ever want to really do is
:%bd|e#
– shmupMar 7, 2017 at 19:00 -
72@jorgeh
%bd
= delete all buffers.e#
= open the last buffer for editing. The pipe in between just does one command after another. Mar 21, 2017 at 22:39 -
58@Jared You can use
%bd|e#|bd#
to delete the[No Name]
buffer that gets created.– kshenoyFeb 19, 2018 at 18:30 -
20Wonderful. Then here you have the only thing I ever used the BufOnly plugin for, distilled to a single command:
command! BufOnly silent! execute "%bd|e#|bd#"
– shmupApr 1, 2018 at 23:01 -
13
Try this
bufdo bd
bufdo runs command for all buffers
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3
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3You might want to close NERDTree before doing this to prevent the
bd
command close the vim itself;nnoremap <silent> <leader>c :NERDTreeClose<bar>bufdo bd<CR>
.– lvarayutDec 29, 2015 at 17:01 -
17
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19This closes all buffers for me, which is not what the questions asks. (MacVim version 8.0.1207) Nov 7, 2017 at 17:20
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9This command closes all the buffers. How can I leave the current one open?– h-raiOct 4, 2018 at 5:44
You could use this script from vim.org:
http://www.vim.org/scripts/script.php?script_id=1071
Just put it to your .vim/plugin
directory and then use :BufOnly
command to close all buffers but the active one. You could also map it elsewhere you like in your .vimrc
.
Source on Github (via vim-scripts mirror): https://github.com/vim-scripts/BufOnly.vim/blob/master/plugin/BufOnly.vim
If you don´t care the current one, is more simple to do something like (no script needing):
1,100bd
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5
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I faced some problems using this command when NERDTree is enabled. I recomment using the BufOnly.vim plugin as mentioned by @VoY .– moeabdolMay 6, 2015 at 15:41
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1I made the following mapping which accounts for deleting the NERDTree buffer:
nnoremap <leader>bd :%bd | NERDTree<cr>
– UriAug 21, 2015 at 14:54 -
6I used this for a long time, but now I get
E16: Invalid range
because some of the buffers in the range don't actually exist. It was ignoring that until recently.– JonDec 10, 2015 at 9:34 -
3@Jon Check
:ls
to see the largest buffer you actually have open, and set your range to that (i.e. if your highest buffer is 22, then:1,22bd
). I got the same error until I did that.– NairouJan 25, 2016 at 0:57
I do this
:w | %bd | e#
My favorite if I just want my current buffer open and close all others.
How it works: first write current buffer's changes, then close all open buffers, then reopen the buffer I was currently on. In Vim, the |
chains the execution of commands together. If your buffer is up to date the above can be shortened to :%bd | e#
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It mostly works fine. but sometimes
%
can't work as all selector. Could you guess anything? Dec 21, 2015 at 13:27 -
2@JinyoungKim (from [1]) In the ":%bd" command, the '%' range will be replaced with the starting and ending line numbers in the current buffer. Instead of using '%' as the range, you should specify numbers for the range. For example, to delete all the buffers, you can use the command ":1,9999bd" [1] vimdoc.sourceforge.net/cgi-bin/vimfaq2html3.pl#8.8 Dec 21, 2015 at 15:33
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I just checked out the document. So then, '%' range rely on a number of current file lines? Dec 21, 2015 at 16:04
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2I found built-in function
bufnr("$")
that returns last buffer number. but I have no idea to interpolate to string when I use like this:1,bufnr("$")bd
. Maybe.. best solution would be:1,9999bd
. Dec 21, 2015 at 16:37 -
5
:help :bd
shows:%bdelete " delete all buffers
. So%
is exactly what you want. I use a variant of your solution::%bd<CR><C-O>:bd#<CR>
This will delete all buffers, then use<C-O>
to get restore the position in the current file, then:bd#
to remove the unamed buffer. This closes all buffers and leaves you in the same location in the file. Sep 27, 2017 at 20:58
Building on juananruiz's answer.
Make a small change in the buffer you want to keep, then
:1,1000bd
The command bd
(buffer delete) will not delete any buffers with unsaved changes. This way you can keep the current (changed) file in the buffer list.
Edit: Please notice that this will also delete your NERDTreeBuffer. You can get it back with :NERDTree
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64
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1This is the best answer. Even works when you want to keep more than one buffer.– saudAug 12, 2020 at 7:23
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Thi should be the accepted answer. No command sequence to memorize, and retains the editing history of the buffer(s) you want to keep. As easy as it gets, wich I could upvote it more :) Mar 9, 2023 at 15:37
Here's what I do. So I like to keep my cursor position after removing all buffers and most of the solutions above just ignores this fact. I also think remapping the command is better than typing it so Here I use <leader>bd
to remove all buffers and jump back to my original cursor position.
noremap <leader>bd :%bd\|e#\|bd#<cr>\|'"
%bd
= delete all buffers.
e#
= open the last buffer for editing (Which Is the buffer I'm working on).
bd#
to delete the [No Name] buffer that gets created when you use %bd
.
The pipe in between just does one command after another. You've gotta escape it though using \|
'"
= keep my cursor position.
I put this in my .vimrc file
nnoremap <leader>ca :w <bar> %bd <bar> e# <bar> bd# <CR>
then your leader + ca
(close all) close all the buffers except the current one.
What it does is
:w - save current buffer
%bd - close all the buffers
e# - open last edited file
bd# - close the unnamed buffer
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Love it, tweaked slightly and added to my config:
nnoremap <silent> <leader>bo :w <bar> %bd <bar> e# <bar> bd# <CR><CR>
May 30, 2021 at 16:40 -
I would suggest changing
:w ...
for:up ...
(update) only writes if the current file has changed. Aug 5, 2022 at 15:33
Note: As mentioned in the comments, this closes windows and not buffers.
By using
:on[ly][!]
and
:h only
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18Still useful, as people may well Googling for the wrong term, and will find this. So thanks to both of you. :)– archgoonOct 2, 2014 at 18:06
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2
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Closing all open buffers:
silent! execute "1,".bufnr("$")."bd"
Closing all open buffers except for the current one:
function! CloseAllBuffersButCurrent()
let curr = bufnr("%")
let last = bufnr("$")
if curr > 1 | silent! execute "1,".(curr-1)."bd" | endif
if curr < last | silent! execute (curr+1).",".last."bd" | endif
endfunction
Add this function to .vimrc
and call it using :call CloseAllBuffersButCurrent()
.
Convenience map:
nmap <Leader>\c :call CloseAllBuffersButCurrent()<CR>
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I noticed that when resuming vim sessions, which does restore buffers, I wasn't able to remove buffers anymore using the above. Instead, I had to use
:%bd|e#|bd#
– shmupApr 1, 2018 at 23:07 -
1Best solution. I added a command to reopen NERDTree
nmap <Leader>\c :call CloseAllBuffersButCurrent()<CR>:NERDTree<CR>
– GjaaMar 2, 2020 at 19:17
There's a plugin that does exactly this and a bit more!
Check out close-buffers.vim
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Absolutely fantastic plugin! Having tried the other options (remappings) I highly recommend this plugin. Dec 15, 2020 at 0:03
:%bd then Ctrl-o
:%bd to delete all buffers
Ctrl-o to jump back to the last buffer, which would be the "This One" you were referring to.
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This will leave 2 buffers actually. The "last buffer" and an empty one.– niidDec 12, 2022 at 23:06
so this is an old question but it helped me get some ideas for my project. in order to close all buffers but the one you are currently using, use;
map <leader>o :execute "%bd\|e#"<CR>
- The answer with highest votes will reopen the buffer, it will lose the current line we are working on.
- Close then reopen will induce a flush on screen
function! CloseOtherBuffer()
let l:bufnr = bufnr()
execute "only"
for buffer in getbufinfo()
if !buffer.listed
continue
endif
if buffer.bufnr == l:bufnr
continue
else
if buffer.changed
echo buffer.name . " has changed, save first"
continue
endif
let l:cmd = "bdelete " . buffer.bufnr
execute l:cmd
endif
endfor
endfunction
let mapleader = ','
nnoremap <leader>o :call CloseOtherBuffer()<CR>
Previous code will take effect when you are on the target buffer and press , + o. It will close all other buffers except current one.
It iterates all the buffers and close all the buffer number which is not equal to current buffer number.
Here's a lua
function that does this. Added benefit is that the current buffer doesn't get closed at all so the cursor remains in the same position:
CloseAllButCurrent = function()
local current_buf = vim.fn.bufnr()
local current_win = vim.fn.win_getid()
local bufs = vim.fn.getbufinfo({buflisted = 1})
for _, buf in ipairs(bufs) do
if buf.bufnr ~= current_buf then
vim.cmd("silent! bdelete " .. buf.bufnr)
end
end
vim.fn.win_gotoid(current_win)
end
And then map it with something like:
vim.keymap.set(
"n",
'<leader>aq',
function() CloseAllButCurrent() end,
{silent = true, desc = "Close all other buffers except current one." }
)
With lua as suggested here
This works quite well for me
local function closeAllBuffersButCurrentOne()
local bufs = vim.api.nvim_list_bufs()
local current_buf = vim.api.nvim_get_current_buf()
for _, i in ipairs(bufs) do
if i ~= current_buf then
vim.api.nvim_buf_delete(i, {})
end
end
end
vim.keymap.set('n', '<leader>Q', closeAllBuffersButCurrentOne)
I like 1,100bd
(suggested by juananruiz) which seems to work for me.
I added a quit!
to my mapping to give me
nnoremap <leader>bd :1,100bd<CR>
nnoremap <leader>bdq :1,100bd<CR>:q!<CR>
This kills all the buffers and shuts down Vim, which is what I was looking for mostly.
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1There's really no reason for you to have the
bdq
mapping that closes all buffers and exits vim with:q!
, when instead you can just use:qa!
. Unless I'm overlooking something– shmupApr 1, 2018 at 23:11
How about just:
ctrl-w o
(thanks to https://thoughtbot.com/blog/vim-splits-move-faster-and-more-naturally)
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5
I combined Alejandro's comment with badteeth's comment:
command! Bonly silent execute "%bd|norm <C-O>"
- The
norm <C-O>
jumps to the last position in the jump list, which means where the cursor was before the%bd
. - I used
silent
instead ofsilent!
. That way, if any open buffers are modified, Vim prints an error message so I know what happened. The modified buffers stay open in my tests.
Unrelated: this is my 500th answer!
nnoremap <leader>x :execute '%bdelete\|edit #\|normal `"'\|bdelete#<CR>
- Close all buffers (side-effect creates new empty buffer)
- Open last buffer
- Jump to last edit position in buffer
- Delete empty buffer
Regarding the solution of mynyml, here's the Lua version:
vim.api.nvim_create_user_command("BufClose", function ()
local current_buffer = vim.fn.bufnr("%")
local last_buffer = vim.fn.bufnr("$")
if current_buffer > 1 then
vim.cmd("silent! " .. "1, " .. current_buffer - 1 .. "bd")
end
if current_buffer < last_buffer then
vim.cmd("silent! " .. current_buffer + 1 .. "," .. last_buffer .. "bd")
end
end, {
nargs = 0,
})
-- now just
:BufClose